| Literature DB >> 19513282 |
Beom Joon Kim1, Seung-Hoon Lee.
Abstract
We report a patient with multiple simultaneous embolic infarctions with localized hemorrhagic conversion. A 75-year-old male patient had several silent microbleeds (SMBs) exclusively in the cerebral cortex, and underwent angioplasty and stenting for bilateral carotid stenosis. He subsequently experienced embolic infarctions in the cortex and the striatum: the cortical infarction, where an SMB had been present, showed hemorrhagic conversion, whereas the striatal infarction did not. This case suggests that SMBs are indicators of an underlying hemorrhage-prone state.Entities:
Keywords: Hemorrhage; Ischemic stroke; Microbleeds; Stroke assessment
Year: 2007 PMID: 19513282 PMCID: PMC2686849 DOI: 10.3988/jcn.2007.3.3.147
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Neurol ISSN: 1738-6586 Impact factor: 3.077
Figure 1Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) obtained before (A and B) and after (C and D) balloon angioplasty and stenting performed on both carotid arteries. The gradient-echo (GRE) sequence MRI image obtained before the stenting contained two silent microbleeds (SMBs, arrowheads) in the right parietal cortex (A), but no such lesions in the deep gray matter (B). After the stenting, embolic infarctions (arrows) were simultaneously present in two areas: the left striatum and right parietal cortex (C). However, a hemorrhagic conversion (arrowhead) was identified only around the cortical stroke lesions (D) where SMBs were originally present.