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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Aug 21.
Published in final edited form as: Cerebellum. 2016 Jun;15(3):369–391. doi: 10.1007/s12311-015-0687-3

Table 1.

Most commonly used clinical maneuvers to evaluate the cerebellar motor syndrome

Clinical test Signs looked for/evaluated
Oculomotor tests
Ocular stability Nystagmus, saccadic intrusions
Ocular pursuit Saccadic pursuit
Saccades Dysmetric saccades
Head-impulse test (HIT) Impaired vestibulo-ocular response (VOR)
Ocular alignment Skew deviation, esotropia
Speech
To repeat a standard sentence or normal conversation Dysarthric speech
Upper limb movements
Finger-to-nose test Decomposition of movement, dysmetria, kinetic tremor, intention tremor
Finger chase Dysmetria
Finger-to-finger test (index-index test) Kinetic tremor, intention tremor
Fast alternating movements Adiadochokinesia
Stewart-Holmes maneuver Rebound phenomenon
Lower limb movements
Heel-to-shin test (knee-tibia test) Decomposition of movement, kinetic tremor, dysmetria
Trunk movements
Quality of sitting Increased sway of the trunk
Muscle tone
Passive stretch of joints Hypotonia
Knee jerk Pendular knee jerk
Stance and gait
Standing in natural position, feet together Ataxia of stance, titubation, lateropulsion
Regular gait/walking capacities Ataxic gait
Tandem gait (heels to toes) Ataxic gait
Handwriting
Standard sentence Irregular writing, megalographia, kinetic tremor
Archimedes’ spiral Kinetic tremor, dysmetria

Action tremor (which refers to any tremor produced by voluntary contraction of the muscles) includes postural and kinetic tremor