I am seeing the same jitter from my MEMS outputs.
I'm wondering how difficult it would be to surgically install an additional inductor in the circuit. Looking at the schematic, it appears that there are two decoupling capacitors dedicated to the MEMS device, C36 (10uF) and C37 (100nF). I've looked closely at the PCB and see two undesignated capacitors immediately below U6 (the MEMS accerometer).
If these are the capacitors that I suspect that they are, would it be possible to make a tiny cut in the trace that leads from VCC3 to the capacitors and then to the IC, and then splice a surface-mount inductor (10uH, for example) into the circuit? If the board layout is not conducive to that modification, how about removing the capacitors altogether and installing a very small, flying PCB in its place containing the capacitors and the inductor?
I'm not suggesting everyone try this - I do this kind of work for a living and have the tools that make it straightforward. What I want to know is if the PCB is laid out in such a way that this sort of change is possible. I don't really feel like stripping all the parts off to find out
A peek at the production artwork would be helpful here.
Thanks,
Dale Wheat