Search results for "Posterior Cerebral Artery"

showing 8 items of 8 documents

Atypical posterior circulation strokes: a case-based review of rare anatomical variations involved

2021

The circle of Willis is a very important vascular mechanism of protecting against cerebral ischemia, especially when circulation within the main arteries irrigating the brain is somehow impeded. As result of congenital malformation arising early in embryonic development, the fetal-type posterior circle of Willis remains as such during the rest of one's life. Consequently, the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) becomes a branch of the internal carotid artery (ICA), rather than of the basilar artery (BA). Furthermore, the rest of collateral circulation, between the anterior and the posterior regions of the brain, is also negatively affected (e.g., leptomeningeal vessels). The anatomical variant …

EmbryologyThalamusCase ReportPosterior cerebral arteryanatomic variantArtery of PercheronMagnetic resonance angiographyPathology and Forensic Medicineartery of Percheronmedicine.arterymedicineBasilar arteryHumanscircle of WillisRetrospective StudiesPosterior Cerebral Arterymedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryCell BiologyGeneral MedicineAnatomyCollateral circulationstrokemedicine.anatomical_structureCerebrovascular CirculationInternal carotid arterybusinessCarotid Artery InternalMagnetic Resonance AngiographyDevelopmental BiologyCircle of WillisMRIRomanian Journal of Morphology and Embryology
researchProduct

Epidural hematoma after cochlear implantation in a 2.5-year-old boy.

2005

OBJECTIVE Report a case of an epidural hematoma after cochlear implantation in a 2.5-year-old boy, the diagnostic and therapeutical emergency management, as well as the postinterventional course and rehabilitation of the child. STUDY DESIGN Retrospective case review. PATIENT Two and a half-year-old boy, suffering from early onset, profound sensorineural hearing loss had been diagnosed at an age of 1.5 years, which had been more severe on the right side initially, but had progressed to bilateral deafness. INTERVENTION AND COMPLICATION: Cochlear implantation on the left side, followed up by an extensive epidural hematoma, causing intracranial compression with a midline shift of 15 mm to the r…

Hematoma Epidural CranialMaleReoperationmedicine.medical_specialtyCritical CareInfarctionBilateral DeafnessAudiologyDeafnessDiagnosis DifferentialInfarction Posterior Cerebral ArteryEpidural hematomaPostoperative ComplicationsMidline shiftmedicine.arteryAnterior cerebral arterymedicineElectrocoagulationHumansDominance CerebralNeurologic Examinationbusiness.industryInfarction Middle Cerebral Arterymedicine.diseaseCochlear ImplantationMagnetic Resonance ImagingMeningeal ArteriesSensory SystemsTentoriumTemporal LobeSurgeryEpistaxisOtorhinolaryngologyIntracranial EmbolismChild PreschoolNeurology (clinical)ImplantOccipital LobeComplicationbusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedFollow-Up StudiesOtologyneurotology : official publication of the American Otological Society, American Neurotology Society [and] European Academy of Otology and Neurotology
researchProduct

Photoreactive flow changes in the posterior cerebral artery in control subjects and patients with occipital lobe infarction.

1995

Background and Purpose Photoreactive flow changes of the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) in control subjects and patients with unilateral occipital lobe infarction were investigated to study the hypothesis that occipital lobe infarction of varying extent leads to a reduced visually activated flow increase in the ipsilateral PCA. Methods Maximum mean flow velocity (MFV) of the PCA was investigated by transcranial Doppler sonography after photic stimulation of the retina. Results In 25 control subjects MFV was increased by 30.6±9.7%. In 13 patients with unilateral occipital lobe infarction the ipsilateral MFV increase was significantly lower than in control subjects. Nine patients with homon…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyUltrasonography Doppler TranscranialHomonymous hemianopsiaCerebral arteriesVision DisordersHemodynamicsInfarctionPosterior cerebral arteryRetinamedicine.arteryInternal medicineMedicineHumansHemianopsiaAdvanced and Specialized Nursingbusiness.industryCerebral infarctionReproducibility of ResultsCerebral InfarctionCerebral Arteriesmedicine.diseaseAnesthesiaCerebrovascular CirculationCardiologyHemianopsiaFemaleNeurology (clinical)Occipital LobeVisual FieldsCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinebusinessOccipital lobeBlood Flow VelocityPhotic StimulationStroke
researchProduct

Neuroimaging for the anesthesiologist.

2007

Neuroimaging is essential in the treatment of cerebral nervous system disorders or in patients in the ICU with deterioration of their neurologic function. Leading clinical symptoms are acute neurologic deficits with different stages of hemisymptomatology, primary or progressing loss of consciousness or vigilance deficit, focal or generalized seizures, sometimes combined with an acute respiratory or circulatory insufficiency. The resulting questions can be summarized in those of intracranial space occupying hemorrhage; acute infarction; and signs for reduced cerebral blood flow, cerebrovascular vasospasm, or intracranial mass. Recent evolutions in imaging have contributed to an increase in d…

Nervous systemTraumatic brain injurymedia_common.quotation_subjectInfarctionDiagnosis DifferentialNeuroimagingAnesthesiologymedicineCraniocerebral TraumaHumansmedia_commonPosterior Cerebral ArteryBrain Diseasesbusiness.industryBrainVasospasmGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseMagnetic Resonance ImagingAnesthesiology and Pain Medicinemedicine.anatomical_structureCerebral blood flowAnesthesiaCirculatory systembusinessTomography X-Ray ComputedVigilance (psychology)Anesthesiology clinics
researchProduct

Applied Anatomy of the Cerebral Arteries

1991

Four arteries supply the brain with blood: the two carotid and the two vertebral arteries. Although these four vessels are ultimately interlinked via a basal arterial network, the circle of Willis, and anastomoses at the brain surface, Heubner’s anastomoses, it is useful to distinguish anterior (carotid anterior and middle cerebral) and posterior (vertebrobasilar posterior cerebral) vascular territories (Gillian 1957, 1968; Lazorthes 1961; Kaplan and Ford 1966; Ganshirt 1972; Seeger 1978; Dorndorf 1983; Duus 1983).

business.industryVertebral arteryCerebral arteriesPosterior cerebral arteryAnatomyAnastomosisBasal (phylogenetics)medicine.arteryOphthalmic arterycardiovascular systemmedicineAnterior cerebral arterybusinessCircle of Willis
researchProduct

Tentorial Incision vs. Retraction of the Tentorial Edge during the Subtemporal Approach: Anatomical Comparison in Cadaveric Dissections and Retrospec…

2018

Abstract Objective The aim of this study was to compare tentorial incision (group A) versus retraction and tack up suture (group B) of the tentorial edge during the subtemporal approach for surgery in the high basilar region. Design 24 cadaveric dissections and 4 clinical cases of aneurysms of the high basilar region are presented. Assessment included visibility and operability afforded by either tentorial incision creating a dural flap (group A) or retraction of the tentorial edge and tethering with a suture (group B). Four patients, two with superior cerebellar artery aneurysms and two with proximal posterior cerebral artery aneurysms were treated with each approach. Results In the quanti…

business.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentPosterior cerebral arteryClipping (medicine)AnatomyTentoriumSubtemporal approach03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSuture (anatomy)medicine.arterymedicineBasilar arterycardiovascular systemNeurology (clinical)Cadaveric spasmSuperior cerebellar arterybusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryJournal of neurological surgery. Part B, Skull base
researchProduct

Fetal variant of posterior cerebral artery: just a physiologic variant or a window for possible ischemic stroke?

2021

N/A

medicine.medical_specialtyNeurologyDermatologyPosterior cerebral arteryBrain IschemiaText miningmedicine.arteryInternal medicinemedicineHumansNeuroradiologyIschemic StrokePosterior Cerebral ArteryFetusbusiness.industryWindow (computing)Settore MED/37 - NeuroradiologiaGeneral MedicineCerebral AngiographyStrokePsychiatry and Mental healthIschemic strokeCardiologySettore MED/26 - NeurologiaNeurology (clinical)Neurosurgerybusiness
researchProduct

Clinical Syndromes, Pathogenesis, and Differential Diagnosis

1991

The temporal sequence of signs and symptoms in patients with cerebral ischemia provides important information for the analysis of underlying pathophysiologic mechanisms and in the search for a major hemodynamic or embolic cause. The signs reported and symptoms assessed are useful for localization of the ischemic region of the brain and identification of the affected vascular territories. Even in the case of a typical clinical picture the clinical findings alone are often insufficient for unequivocal anatomic and pathologic identification, however important they may be in the choice of diagnostic and therapeutic measures. In the first few hours after cerebral ischemia, determining the progno…

medicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industrymedicine.medical_treatmentIschemiaHemodynamicsSpontaneous remissionThrombolysisPosterior cerebral arterymedicine.diseasePathogenesismedicine.arteryInternal medicinemedicineBasilar arteryCardiologyDifferential diagnosisbusiness
researchProduct