Double infarction in one cerebral hemisphere
β Scribed by Dr. Julien Bogousslavsky
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 778 KB
- Volume
- 30
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0364-5134
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Thirty-two patients whose first stroke was due to double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere were identified among 1,911 consecutive patients from the Lausanne Stroke Registry. T h e double infarct involved territories of the superficial middle cerebral artery, superficial posterior cerebral artery, lenticulostriate, anterior choroidal artery, or borderzone.
The most common combination involved territories of the anterior middle cerebral artery plus the posterior middle cerebral artery. I n the patients with the double infarct, the prevalence of potential cardiac sources of embolism (19%) was similar to that found in the registry in general, but the double infarct was closely associated with tight (a 90% of the lumen diameter) stenosis or occlusion (75%) of the internal carotid artery. T h e most common neurological picture mimicked large infarction in the middle cerebral artery territory, but nearly half of the patients with double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere had a specific clinical syndrome, which was not found in the 1,879 remaining patients from the registry, including hemianopia-hemiplegia (in 6), acute conduction aphasia-hemiparesis (in 2), and acute transcortical mixed aphasia (in 6), in relation to characteristic combinations of infarcts. These unique clinical and etiological correlates warrant the recognition of double infarct in one cerebral hemisphere from other acute ischemic strokes.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
We report on an infant with severe Noonan syndrome, chylothoraces, and hepatosplenomegaly who suffered two episodes of cerebral infarction before age 6 months. No underlying cause for these events was found. The presentation is discussed in relationship to other reports of stroke in Noonan syndrome