Introduction
Incidence of Cerebrovascular Diseases
Definition of Terms
Definition of Terms
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Ischemic Stroke |
Signs and symptoms | Structures involved |
---|---|
Paralysis of the contralateral face, arm, and leg | Somatic motor area for face and arm and the fibers descending from the leg area to enter the corona radiata |
Sensory impairment over the contralateral face, arm, and leg (pinprick, cotton touch, vibration, position, two-point discrimination, stereognosis, tactile localization, baragnosis, cutaneographia) | Somatosensory area for face and arm and thalamoparietal projections |
Motor speech disorder | Broca and adjacent motor area of the dominant hemisphere |
"Central" aphasia, word deafness, anomia, jargon speech, alexia, agraphia, acalculia, finger agnosia, right–left confusion (the last four comprise the Gerstmann syndrome) | Central language area and parietooccipital cortex of the dominant hemisphere |
Apractagnosia (amorphosynthesis), anosognosia, hemiasomatognosia, unilateral neglect, agnosia for the left half of external space, "dressing apraxia," "constructional apraxia," distortion of visual coordinates, inaccurate localization in the half field, impaired ability to judge distance, upside-down reading, visual illusions | Usually nondominant parietal lobe. Loss of topographic memory is usually caused by a nondominant lesion, occasionally by a dominant one |
Homonymous hemianopia (often superior homonymous quadrantanopia) | Optic radiation deep to second temporal convolution |
Paralysis of conjugate gaze to the opposite side | Frontal contraversive field or fibers projecting therefrom |
Avoidance reaction of opposite limbs | Parietal lobe |
Miscellaneous: | |
Ataxia of contralateral limb(s) | Parietal lobe |
So-called Bruns ataxia or apraxia of gait | Frontal lobes (bilateral) |
Loss or impairment of optokinetic nystagmus | Supramarginal gyrus or inferior parietal lobe |
Limb-kinetic apraxia | Premotor or parietal cortical damage |
Mirror movements | Precise location of responsible lesions not known |
Cheyne-Stokes respiration, contralateral hyperhidrosis, mydriasis (occasionally) | Precise location of responsible lesions not known |
Pure motor hemiplegia | Upper portion of the posterior limb of the internal capsule and the adjacent corona radiata |
Signs and symptoms | Structures involved |
---|---|
Paralysis of opposite foot and leg | Motor leg area |
A lesser degree of paresis of opposite arm | Involvement of arm area of cortex or fibers descending therefrom to corona radiata |
Cortical sensory loss over toes, foot, and leg | Sensory area for foot and leg |
Urinary incontinence | Posteromedial part of superior frontal gyrus (bilateral) |
Contralateral grasp reflex, sucking reflex, gegenhalten (paratonic rigidity), "frontal tremor" | Medial surface of the posterior frontal lobe (?) |
Abulia (akinetic mutism), slowness, delay, lack of spontaneity, whispering, motor inaction, reflex distraction to sights and sounds | Uncertain localization—probably superomedial lesion near subcallosum |
Impairment of gait and stance (gait "apraxia") | Inferomedial frontal–striatal (?) |
Mental impairment (perseveration and amnesia) | Localization unknown |
Miscellaneous: dyspraxia of left limbs | Corpus callosum |
Tactile aphasia in left limbs | Corpus callosum |
Cerebral paraplegia | Motor leg area bilaterally (because of bilateral occlusion of anterior cerebral arteries) |
Signs and symptoms | Structures involved |
---|---|
Central territory | |
Thalamic syndrome: sensory loss (all modalities), spontaneous pain and dysesthesias, choreoathetosis, intention tremor, spasms of hand, mild hemiparesis | Ventral posterolateral nucleus of thalamus in territory of thalamogeniculate artery. Involvement of the adjacent subthalamic nucleus or its pallidal connections results in hemiballismus and choreoathetosis. |
Thalamoperforate syndrome: (1) superior, crossed cerebellar ataxia; (2) inferior, crossed cerebellar ataxia with ipsilateral third-nerve palsy (Claude syndrome) | Dentatothalamic tract and issuing third nerve |
Weber syndrome—third-nerve palsy and contralateral hemiplegia | Issuing third nerve and cerebral peduncle |
Contralateral hemiplegia | Cerebral peduncle |
Paralysis or paresis of vertical eye movement, skew deviation, sluggish pupillary responses to light, slight miosis and ptosis (retraction nystagmus and "tucked-in" eyelids may be associated) | Supranuclear fibers to third nerve, high midbrain tegmentum ventral to superior colliculus (nucleus of Cajal, nucleus of Darkschevich, rostral interstitial nucleus of the medial longitudinal fasciculus, and posterior commissure) |
Contralateral ataxic or postural tremor | Dentatothalamic tract (?) after decussation. Precise site of lesion unknown. |
Decerebrate attacks | Damage to motor tracts between red and vestibular nuclei |
Peripheral territory | |
Homonymous hemianopia | Calcarine cortex or optic radiation; hemiachromatopsia may be present. Macular or central vision is preserved if posterior striate area is spared. |
Bilateral homonymous hemianopia, cortical blindness, unawareness or denial of blindness; achromatopsia, failure to see to-and-fro movements, inability to perceive objects not centrally located, apraxia of ocular movements, inability to count or enumerate objects | Bilateral occipital lobe, possibly with involvement of parietooccipital region |
Dyslexia without agraphia, color anomia | Dominant calcarine lesion and posterior part of corpus callosum |
Memory defect | Lesion of inferomedial portions of temporal lobe bilaterally; occasionally of the dominant side only |
Topographic disorientation and prosopagnosia | Nondominant calcarine and lingual gyri, usually bilateral |
Simultagnosia | Dominant visual cortex, sometimes bilateral |
Unformed visual hallucinations, metamorphopsia, teleopsia, illusory visual spread, palinopsia, distortion of outlines, photophobia | Calcarine cortex |
'Private > SSY' 카테고리의 다른 글
Antibiotics (0) | 2009.10.11 |
---|---|
우리나라 의사 면허 (0) | 2009.08.15 |
Disorders of Speech and Language (0) | 2009.06.09 |
Pediatric Physical Therapy (0) | 2009.04.22 |
Alternate way to use the Spine Force (0) | 2009.04.22 |