Neurologist
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Rarely, both paramedian thalami receive arterial blood flow from a single unilateral vessel arising from the first segment of 1 posterior cerebral artery. This artery has received the name of artery of Percheron (AP). There is no consensus regarding the true prevalence of this anatomical variant. Bilateral paramedian thalamic infarcts are uncommon (0.1% to 2% of ischemic strokes). The main cause is the occlusion of the AP due to cardioembolism. Diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging demonstrates the lesion in the acute setting. ⋯ Clinical presentation and imaging patterns described in this group of patients were similar to published data. High level of suspicion based on clinical and imaging findings is essential for early diagnosis of this rare condition. None of our patients had an early diagnosis of acute ischemic stroke and received proper thrombolytic treatment.
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Review Case Reports
Acute global ischemic stroke after cranioplasty: case report and review of the literature.
Cranioplasty procedures are performed usually after devastating neurological injuries requiring craniectomies. Although relatively safe, global intracerebral infarction is a poorly understood, and most often, lethal complication after cranioplasty. We report here one such case with a thorough literature review with insight as to possible etiologies of this injury. ⋯ Although global intracerebral infarction after cranioplasty is extremely rare, the concepts of vessel injury, venous stasis, and reperfusion into dysfunctional cerebral tissue after cranioplasty should be considered when evaluating the risk of this procedure.
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Review Case Reports
Cheiro-Oral syndrome secondary to thalamic infarction: a case report and literature review.
Small thalamic infarcts can present with a variety of sensory deficits that can be difficult to diagnose clinically because of their seemingly disconnected manifestations. ⋯ This report highlights both common and unusual clinical presentations of isolated thalamic infarctions, correlating clinical symptomatology with anatomic localization. In patients with such findings on examination, thalamic infarction should be considered, with a thorough workup initiated to both confirm the diagnosis and optimally reduce future stroke risk.
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Review Meta Analysis Comparative Study
Determination of hemispheric language dominance in the surgical epilepsy patient: diagnostic properties of functional magnetic resonance imaging.
Presurgical evaluation for refractory epilepsy typically includes assessment of cognitive and language functions. The reference standard for determination of hemispheric language dominance has been the intracarotid amobarbital test (IAT) but functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is increasingly used. ⋯ There are insufficient data to support routine use of fMRI for the purpose of determining hemispheric language dominance in patients with intractable epilepsy. Larger, well-designed studies of fMRI for language and other cognitive outcomes as part of the presurgical and postsurgical evaluation of epilepsy patients are necessary.
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Review Meta Analysis Comparative Study
Determination of hemispheric language dominance in the surgical epilepsy patient: diagnostic properties of functional magnetic resonance imaging.
Presurgical evaluation for refractory epilepsy typically includes assessment of cognitive and language functions. The reference standard for determination of hemispheric language dominance has been the intracarotid amobarbital test (IAT) but functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is increasingly used. ⋯ There are insufficient data to support routine use of fMRI for the purpose of determining hemispheric language dominance in patients with intractable epilepsy. Larger, well-designed studies of fMRI for language and other cognitive outcomes as part of the presurgical and postsurgical evaluation of epilepsy patients are necessary.