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YNDROMES . Part II. STROKE SYNDROMES. Stroke Within the Anterior Circulation. Middle Cerebral Artery Anterior Cerebral Artery Anterior Choroidal Arteries Internal Carotid Artery Common Carotid Artery. Middle Cerebral Artery.
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Stroke Within the Anterior Circulation • Middle Cerebral Artery • Anterior Cerebral Artery • Anterior Choroidal Arteries • Internal Carotid Artery • Common Carotid Artery
Middle Cerebral Artery • Occlusion of the proximal MCA or one of its major branches is most often due to an embolus rather than intracranial atherothrombosis • The cortical branches of the MCA supply the lateral surface of the hemisphere
Middle Cerebral Artery • The proximal MCA (M1 segment) supplies the following: • Putamen • Outer globuspallidus • Posterior limb of the internal capsule • Corona radiata • Most of the caudate nucleus • In the sylvian fissure, the MCA divides into the superior and inferior divisions (M2 branches) • Inferior division supplies • Inferior parietal and temporal cortex • Superior division supplies • Frontal and superior parietal cortex
Middle Cerebral Artery • entire MCA is occluded at its origin : • contralateral hemiplegia, hemianesthesia, homonymous hemianopia, and a day or two of gaze preference to the ipsilateral side • Dysarthria is common because of facial weakness • global aphasia • anosognosia, constructional apraxia, and neglect
Middle Cerebral Artery: Partial Syndromes • Brachial syndrome : embolic occlusion of a single branch include hand, or arm and hand, weakness alone • Frontal Opercular Syndrome: facial weakness with nonfluent (Broca) aphasia, with or without arm weakness • Lacunar stroke within internal capsule - pure motor stroke or sensory-motor stroke contralateral to the lesion
Stroke within the Anterior Circulation • Anterior Cerebral Artery
Anterior Cerebral Artery • Divided into 2 segments: • Precommunal Circle of Willis (A1) • Connects the internal carotid artery to the anterior communicating artery • Postcommunal segment (A2) *Pericallousal artery (A3) • Main terminal branches of the ACA
Anterior Cerebral Artery • Supplies the anterior limb of the internal capsule, the anterior perforate substance, amygdala, anterior hypothalamus, and the inferior part of the head of the caudate nucleus • Occlusion of the proximal ACA is usually well tolerated because of collateral flow through the anterior communicating artery and collaterals through the MCA and PCA
Anterior Cerebral Artery • Paralysis of opposite foot and leg: Motor leg area • A lesser degree of paresis of opposite arm: Arm area of cortex or fibers descending to corona radiata • Cortical sensory loss over toes, foot, and leg: Sensory area for foot and leg • Urinary incontinence: Sensorimotor area in paracentral lobule
Anterior Cerebral Artery • Abulia (akineticmutism), slowness, delay, intermittent interruption, lack of spontaneity, whispering, reflex distraction to sights and sounds: Uncertain localization—probably cingulategyrus and medial inferior portion of frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes • Impairment of gait and stance (gait apraxia): Frontal cortex near leg motor area • Dyspraxia of left limbs, tactile aphasia in left limbs: Corpus callosum
Stroke within the Posterior Circulation • Posterior Cerebral Artery • Vertebral Artery • Posterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery • Basilar Artery
Stroke within the Posterior Circulation • Posterior Cerebral Artery • result from atheroma formation or emboli that lodge at the top of the basilar artery • May also be caused by dissection of the vertebral artery or fibromuscular dysplasia
Posterior Cerebral Artery • (1) P1 syndrome: midbrain, subthalamic, and thalamic signs, which are due to disease of the proximal P1 segment of the PCA or its penetrating branches • (2) P2 syndrome: cortical temporal and occipital lobe signs, due to occlusion of the P2 segment distal to the junction of the PCA with the posterior communicating artery.
Posterior Cerebral Artery • P1 Syndromes • third nerve palsy with contralateral ataxia (Claude's syndrome) or with contralateral hemiplegia (Weber's syndrome) • contralateral hemiballismus (if subthalamic nucleus is involved) • thalamic Déjerine-Roussy syndrome - contralateral hemisensory loss followed later by an agonizing, searing or burning pain in the affected areas
Posterior Cerebral Artery • P2 Syndromes • Occulsion of the PCA causes infarction of the medial temporal and occipital lobes • Contralateral homonymous hemianopia with macula sparing is the usual manifestation • acute disturbance in memory (hippocampus) • peduncularhallucinosis - visual hallucinations of brightly colored scenes and objects • infarction in the distal PCAs produces cortical blindness (blindness with preserved PLR) • Anton's syndrome – unaware of blindness and in denial
Basilar Artery • Atheromatous lesions are most frequent in the proximal basilar and the distal vertebral segments • Complete basilar occlusion : • a constellation of bilateral long tract signs (sensory and motor) with signs of cranial nerve and cerebellar dysfunction • “locked-in" state of preserved consciousness with quadriplegia and cranial nerve signs suggests complete pontine and lower midbrain infarction
Basilar Artery • TIAs in the proximal basilar distribution may produce vertigo • Occlusion of the superior cerebellar artery results in • Ipsilateralcerebellar ataxia, nausea and vomiting, dysarthria, contralateral loss of pain and temp sensation • Occusion of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery results in • Ipsilateral deafness, facial weakness, vertigo, nausea and vomiting, nystagmus, tinnitus and contralateral loss of pain and temperature sensation
Imaging • CT Scan • identify or exclude hemorrhage as the cause of stroke • the infarct may not be seen reliably for 24–48 h • may fail to show small ischemic strokes in the posterior fossa • MRI • reliably documents the extent and location of infarction in all areas of the brain • less sensitive than CT for detecting acute blood
Imaging • Cerebral Angiography • "gold standard" for identifying and quantifying atherosclerotic stenoses of the cerebral arteries • used to deploy stents within delicate intracranial vessels • intraarterial delivery of thrombolytic agents • Carries the risk for arterial damage, groin hemorrhage, embolic stroke, embolic stroke, and renal failure
For the next meeting, read on Disturbances of Vision, Ocular Movement, and Hearing • Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine 17th edition