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Basic Anatomy Review Matthew J Pierson, MD Midwest Neurosurgery Associates
32

Basic Anatomy Review - Heart

Jan 16, 2022

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Page 1: Basic Anatomy Review - Heart

Basic Anatomy ReviewMatthew J Pierson, MD

Midwest Neurosurgery Associates

Page 2: Basic Anatomy Review - Heart

I have no relevant financial disclosures

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Outline

• Areas of the brain and their function

• Vascular Territories and Stroke Syndromes

• Examples of Neurosurgical Procedures Related to Stroke

• Questions

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Brain Dysfunction by Location

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Frontal Lobe

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Parietal Lobe

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Temporal Lobe

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Occipital Lobe

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Brainstem

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Cerebellum

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Stroke Breakdown

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Cerebrovascular Territories

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Middle Cerebral Artery

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MCA Infarction SymptomsContralateral hemiparesis

Contralateral Hemisensory Loss

Hemianopia

Aphasia (if dominant hemisphere and may be expressive, receptive or global depending on branches involved)

Neglect (non dominant hemisphere)

Edema from large territory MCA infarctions may become life threatening requiring decompressive craniectomy

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Anterior Cerebral Artery

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ACA Infarction SymptomsContralateral Motor Weakness (leg/shoulder>arm/hand/face)

Limb apraxia

Urinary incontinence

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Posterior Cerebral Artery

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PCA Infarction SymptomsContralateral homonymous hemianopia

Contralateral hemisensory loss

Cortical blindness if bilateral PCA strokes

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Vertebrobasilar InfarctionsMay affect areas of the brain stem, cerebellum or both

Deficit dependent on area of brain stem affected

Cerebellar infarctions may present with ataxia, nausea, vomiting, vertigo

Large territory cerebellar infarctions may cause life threatening edema

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Lacunar InfarctionsMay be ischemic or hemorrhagic

Occur due to occlusion or hemorrhage of small perforating vessel to the deep structures

Symptoms can include contralateral hemiparesis, sensory changes, ataxias, coma

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Questions

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Which lobe contains the motor strip and when damaged can cause hemiplegia, expressive aphasia and apathy?

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Frontal Lobe

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True or False: Hemorrhagic strokes are more common than ischemic strokes.

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False

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Occlusion of what major cerebral artery causes contralateral weakness Leg>arm, limb apraxia and urinary incontinence?

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Anterior Cerebral Artery

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Bilateral occlusion of this cerebral vessel can cause cortical blindness.

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Posterior Cerebral Artery

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Questions?

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Thank you!