0000000000002072
AUTHOR
S. Fitzek
Emergency MRI in Clinical Peracute Brain Stem and Hemispheric Stroke
We show the capability and results of MRI examinations of peracute brainstem and hemispheric stroke patients in clinical emergency situations. The hypothesis that CT scan is faster and more accurate under this conditions is to be disproved.
Topodiagnostic significance of hemiataxia: An MRI based mapping analysis
Abolished laser-evoked potentials and normal blink reflex in midlateral medullary infarction.
We investigated two patients presenting with the rare finding of almost isolated hemianalgesia with a sensory level on the contralateral side sparing the face. Clinical findings, electrophysiological studies (absent laser-evoked pain-related somatosensory potentials, normal electrically evoked somatosensory potentials, magnetically evoked potentials, and blink reflexes), and magnetic resonance imaging showed the ventrolateral medullar tegmentum containing the spinothalamic tract to be affected by lacunar infarction. The blink reflex R2 component was unimpaired in both patients.
Blink reflex R2 changes and localisation of lesions in the lower brainstem (Wallenberg's syndrome): an electrophysiological and MRI study
OBJECTIVES—Pathways of late blink reflexes are detected by high resolution MRI. Electronically matched stroke lesions superimposed to an anatomical atlas show the suspected course. METHODS—Fifteen patients with infarction of the lower brainstem, MRI lesions and electrically elicited blink reflexes were examined. The involved structures in patients with R2 and R2c blink reflex changes were identified by biplane high resolution MRI with individual slices matched to an anatomical atlas at 10 different levels using digital postprocessing methods. RESULTS—The blink reflexes were normal in five of 15 patients (33%) and showed loss or delay of R2 and R2c to stimulation ipsilaterally to lesion (R2-…
Brainstem Anatomy of White Matter Tracts Using Diffusion Weighted Imaging
Ipsilateral facial weakness in upper medullary infarction-supranuclear or infranuclear origin?
We describe two patients with upper medullary infarctions showing ipsilateral facial weakness and relative sparing of the upper facial muscles. Electrophysiological follow-up using transcranial magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex in combination with stimulation of the peripheral facial nerve disclosed a supranuclear (corticofacial) tract lesion in one patient and a partial nuclear/infranuclear intra-axial facial nerve lesion in another.