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Wallenberg's
Syndrome
Wallenberg’s syndrome is a neurological condition
caused by a stroke in the vertebral or posterior inferior cerebellar
artery of the brain stem. Symptoms include difficulties with
swallowing, hoarseness, dizziness, nausea and vomiting, rapid
involuntary movements of the eyes (nystagmus), and problems with
balance and gait coordination. Some individuals will experience a
lack of pain and temperature sensation on only one side of the face,
or a pattern of symptoms on opposite sides of the body - such as
paralysis or numbness in the right side of the face, with weak or
numb limbs on the left side. Uncontrollable hiccups may also occur,
and some individuals will lose their sense of taste on one side of
the tongue, while preserving taste sensations on the other side.
Some people with Wallenberg’s syndrome report that the world seems
to be tilted in an unsettling way, which makes it difficult to keep
their balance when they walk.
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