| Literature DB >> 22665986 |
Abstract
Posterior circulation stroke refers to the vascular occlusion or bleeding, arising from the vertebrobasilar vasculature of the brain. Clinical studies show that individuals who experience posterior circulation stroke will develop significant brain injury, neurologic dysfunction, or death. Yet the therapeutic needs of this patient subpopulation remain largely unknown. Thus understanding the causative factors and the pathogenesis of brain damage is important, if posterior circulation stroke is to be prevented or treated. Appropriate animal models are necessary to achieve this understanding. This paper critically integrates the neurovascular and pathophysiological features gleaned from posterior circulation stroke animal models into clinical correlations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22665986 PMCID: PMC3361739 DOI: 10.1155/2012/587590
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Posterior circulation syndromes and associated brain region, clinical signs.
| Syndrome(s) | Vessel(s) | Brain region(s) | Contralateral sign(s) | Ipsilateral sign(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| None | VA, PICA | Cerebellum | None | Truncal, leg, and gait ataxia/dystaxia |
| Medial medullary, Wallenberg | ASA, VA, PICA | Caudal Medulla | Any sensory input loss hemiplegia | Horner's syndrome, tongue weakness, dysphagia, hoarseness, loss of facial sensation, nystagmus, vertigo, ataxia |
| Locked-in, Foville, Millard-Gubler, Marie-foix | BA, AICA | Pons | Loss of pain or temperature sensation, hemiplegia | Facial or lateral gaze weakness, dysarthria, hemiplegia, ataxia |
| Parinaud, Benedikt, Weber, | PCA | Midbrain | Tremor, hemiplegia, motor deficit, cerebellar ataxia | Paralysis of gaze and accommodation, fixed pupils, CNIII palsy |
| Dejerine-Roussy | PCA | Thalamus | Pain syndrome, any sensory input loss | None |
| Balint, Anton | PCA | Occipital, Temporal lobes | Vision loss, blindness denial | Vision and eye movement loss, misinterpretation of visual objects, blindness denial, loss of visual-motor coordination |
VA: vertebral artery; PICA: posterior inferior cerebellar artery; ASA: anterior spinal artery; BA: basilar artery; AICA: anterior inferior cerebellar artery; PCA: posterior cerebral artery; CNIII: cranial nerve three.