Cerebellar Stroke - experience/treatment/recovery
I suffered a Cerebellar Stroke in Dec 2015 in my 40s and am interested in connecting with other cerebellar stroke survivors to share our experiences, testing/therapy options, struggles on the path to recovery.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Stroke & Cerebrovascular Diseases Support Group.
So awesome to read this!
Welcome to Mayo Connect, @hror, and thank you for sharing your remarkable story! It has certainly inspired me and I'm sure others will feel the same way. I especially like your acknowledging the fears you had and making a decision to put them aside and "do all you can."
That is an important message for us all.
How important do you think attitude is when dealing with a catastrophic event like yours?
Hello everyone, My husband and I are very new to this... he is 56yrs old and in great health but thursday at 1am he ready to punch the time clock at work... he had felt absolutely fine... when he stood up he felt week on his right side and nauseated my son in helped him to the car but he could hardly walk so he took him to er ... by the time he got there he could not open his eyes or even move without throwing up...his eyes would not focus they took his vitals and said it was vertigo and that his vitals were fine... they were very busy so they parked us in a room... a couple hours later we saw the doctor he took a preliminary Ct scan and an MRI and checked his heart....they were still calling it vertigo but since nothing was helping him to stop throwing up they said they would admit him and preform ultrasounds on his neck and heart and sent him for another more detailed MRI... the next day they told us it had been a cerebral stroke... we are lucky..his left side is weak, he has problems writing and he talks with a very slight mumble if he is sitting in bed talking to you it is very difficult to tell that anything is wrong... However he has no balance and at this time cannot even use the walker...this is very new..but we have no insurance so they are talking about sending him home as soon as I can get a ramp for the home... they also said we would get OT and PT visits at least once a week... we know we are lucky but at this point we are so overwhelmed and lost in the whole process...any advice is welcome
Hi @4santajoe and welcome to Connect. It must be difficult to see you husband like this.
I wanted to introduce you to fellow Connect members @hror @hammondm99 and @supra865 as they have experience with cerebellar strokes and may be able to offer you support.
Back to your husband @4santajoe have they told you what the OT and PT will consist of?
Hi @4santajoe. The symptoms you mention that resulted in your husband going to the hospital were very similar to mine. The only thing I can add is I had a dull headache in the back of my head, which when I explained that along with my other symptoms to the admissions nurse, they wasted no time getting me in for an MRI then shipped me out to a hospital better suited to deal with strokes. The unfortunate part is I did not go to the hospital until the next day. My right side was also weak, I couldn't write, brush my teeth well, comb my hair well, feed myself using my right hand, all of that fun stuff you take for granted. I did not have bad balance issues that kept me from getting around on my own though.Coming down stairs were tough and I would bump into the walls every now and then, had a tendency to drift into anyone walking beside me for a little while. It sounds like it has only been a few days, so hopefully his balance will improve in time. The other stuff for me came back (and in some cases, is still coming back) with a lot of in home rehab, Everyone one is different, but for me, it took the drive to do the rehab daily, a lot of time and a lot of patience. I focused on a few things at a time that I had difficulty with and kept working until they got easy, then moved on to the next things. I would get discouraged and angry at times, but I found that if I focused on the progress made, all was good. It's been 13 months for me and I find myself still working to get better (i am tapping my right foot to a beat as I type, still a little tough for me to do, but better than what I could do 6 months ago!). There are a lot of good exercise recommendations for stroke recovery online that may help. Feel free to reach out if you have questions! It helped me quite a bit being able to ask questions on things I experienced and how people may have gotten through certain challenges in this forum.
Hi. I just turned 59 in December 2018 and had a ischemic stroke in the cerabellum on Friday February 8, 2019. This is my 2nd day back home. I feel blessed in that I seem to be recovering well. My double vision is almost cleared up and while I am on a walker- they don't think I will be for long. I will be starting Occupational Therapy and Physical Therapy soon. I did not have typical symptoms. I had been in my PCP's office twice that week and he was leaning toward inner ear pressure (the neurologist felt he understood why the PCP was leaning this way). In early October 2018 I was taken to the ER with vertigo type symptoms. They did an MRI and said the nerve in my left inner ear was inflamed. Now I wonder if it was just the onset of the stroke. I've been reading about strokes today and feel overwhelmed with the blessings I have received in my recovery journey as it could have been far worse. I exercise regurlary for 12+ years, eat right and for the most part I am already doing all the things we need to do. My blood pressure is really low (naturally) I don't have high cholesteroll but I'm on meds now because it is at the borderline. I'm now taking baby aspirin. But this really worries me as there are not drastic things I need to change to prevent a future occurrence.
I just got home from the hospital from a cerebellar stroke on Friday and I noticed my stomach was queasy and I feel sort of light headed but not dizzy. I'm scared and not sure what is over reacting and what is normal.
Hi @bermuda just seen your post. Well after 7 months managed to see cardiologist and has suggested Amplatzer. He said that he has done hundreds in the UK since 2002 and there have been no serious complications. How are you so far? How is your recovery going?
I was considering noble stitch device as an alternative but can't find many people that have had it done.
Hi @trkuk - I had an Amplatzer device implanted. It was an easy procedure at John Hopkins in Baltimore and the doc who did mine had done more than a 1000. He chose the device for me based on his experience. I had a bubble saline test done at 3 months and it still is not 100 percent healed but he said it would take 3-6 months for the heart tissue to cover the device . I had one 2 minute incident of aFib which is experienced by only about 2-3 % of patients - I also have a Linq monitor for my heart rate which picked it up. Nothing since. Would I do it again - absolutely. My cardiologist said that he believes that it reduces, in his cases, the risk of a second stroke by 70% and those are very good odds for me. I am about to have major spine surgery and both the neurologist and neurosurgeon are very pleased that I had the procedure pre op. Hope this helps.
I am 45 years old. I had a cerebellar stroke in September of 2018. Did u recover from your stroke?