A physical movement's ability to be controlled in terms of speed, distance, or range is referred to as dysmetria. Dysmetria can cause people to overshoot or undershoot their movements. Additionally, they might have trouble keeping their balance or coordinating their speech and eye movements. A person with dysmetria has trouble controlling their range of motion, as well as their movement's distance and speed. Dysmetria can be brought on by traumatic brain injury, stroke, brain tumors, and a variety of other conditions. Causes When the cerebellum, a region of the central nervous system that integrates visual, spatial, and other sensory inputs with motor control to coordinate and plan movement as well as maintain balance, is damaged, dysmetria is a usual outcome. Damage to the cerebellum or to the nerves that carry sensory information to it can make it difficult to determine when and where movements should stop; this difficulty is referred to as undershooting or
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