| Literature DB >> 26239245 |
Muhammad Almamun1, Appu Suman2, Syed Arshad3, Sonni Jayathirthachar Sanjeev Kumar4.
Abstract
Blood supply to the thalamus and brainstem have frequent anatomic variations. One of these is where all the perforators to the above areas arise from a single branch of the posterior cerebral artery commonly known as the artery of Percheron. Infarction involving this artery leading to bilateral thalamic and midbrain lesions is not uncommon, but can cause diagnostic difficulties due to the varying clinical presentations possible and the wide differentials. Early brain imaging and diagnosis is important for initiating appropriate treatment. In this case report, we discuss a patient who presented with an artery of Percheron related stroke affecting the mid brain and paramedian thalamic areas. We also discuss the differentials of presentations with similar symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Artery of Percheron (AOP); bilateral lesions; infarct; mid-brain; stroke; thalamus
Year: 2015 PMID: 26239245 PMCID: PMC4470133 DOI: 10.3390/jcm4030369
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Bilateral thalamus and mid brain infarction involving Artery of Percheron. (a) Bilateral thalamic infarcts; (b) Bilateral midbrain infarcts.
Differentials of presentations of Artery of Percheron Infarcts [7,8].
| Differentials | Acute/Subacute Presentations |
|---|---|
| Vascular–Arterial | Stroke-Infarct-tip of basilar artery syndrome, PoA occlusion |
| Vascular–Venous | Cerebral Vein Thrombosis especially Great vein of Galen, Straight Sinus thrombosis |
| Infections–Viral | Flavi virus infections e.g., Japanese Encephalitis (90% of patients have bithalamic involvement), West Nile Virus encephalitis |
| Infections–others | Tuberculous Meningio-encephalitis, Fungal Infection, Malaria, Toxoplasmosis |
| Demyelination | Acute Demyelinating Encephalomyelitis, Multiple Sclerosis |
| Spongiform encephalopathy | Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD), CJD |
| Thiamine deficiency | Wernicke’s encephalopathy |
| Hypoxic injury newborn | Profound Hypoxia of the Newborn |
| Vascular | Chronic Hypertensive encephalopathy leading to lacunar infarcts/microbleeds |
| Tumours | Astrocytoma, Glioblastoma Multiforme, Germinoma, lymphomas (1% of Central nervous System tumours) |
| Congenital Metabolic Syndrome | Leigh Syndrome (mitrochondropathy), Gangliosidoses (Lysosomal disorders), Krabbe’s disease, Wilson’s Disease |
| Cerebrovascular Ferrocalcinosis | Fahr’s Disease |