The cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome
- PMID: 9577385
- DOI: 10.1093/brain/121.4.561
The cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome
Abstract
Anatomical, physiological and functional neuroimaging studies suggest that the cerebellum participates in the organization of higher order function, but there are very few descriptions of clinically relevant cases that address this possibility. We performed neurological examinations, bedside mental state tests, neuropsychological studies and anatomical neuroimaging on 20 patients with diseases confined to the cerebellum, and evaluated the nature and severity of the changes in neurological and mental function. Behavioural changes were clinically prominent in patients with lesions involving the posterior lobe of the cerebellum and the vermis, and in some cases they were the most noticeable aspects of the presentation. These changes were characterized by: impairment of executive functions such as planning, set-shifting, verbal fluency, abstract reasoning and working memory; difficulties with spatial cognition including visual-spatial organization and memory; personality change with blunting of affect or disinhibited and inappropriate behaviour; and language deficits including agrammatism and dysprosodia. Lesions of the anterior lobe of the cerebellum produced only minor changes in executive and visual-spatial functions. We have called this newly defined clinical entity the 'cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome'. The constellation of deficits is suggestive of disruption of the cerebellar modulation of neural circuits that link prefrontal, posterior parietal, superior temporal and limbic cortices with the cerebellum.
Comment in
-
A cognitive affective role for the cerebellum.Brain. 1998 Apr;121 ( Pt 4):545-6. doi: 10.1093/brain/121.4.545. Brain. 1998. PMID: 9577383 No abstract available.
-
The cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome.Brain. 1998 Nov;121 ( Pt 11):2202-5. doi: 10.1093/brain/121.11.2202. Brain. 1998. PMID: 9827779 No abstract available.
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical