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cerebral circulation & CSF
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Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

cerebral circulation & CSF

Page 2: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below.

Difficulty in swallowing the oral secretions?

Patient is finding difficulty from sitting to standing posture?

Alexia without Agraphia? Contralateral Leg Weakness? Patient is unable to clench his

teeth?

Page 3: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Blood Supply to Brain About 18% -20% of the total blood volume in the body

circulates in the brain(about 750ml), which accounts for about 2% of the body weight.

The blood transports oxygen, nutrients, and other substances necessary for proper functioning of the brain tissues and carries away metabolites.

Loss of consciousness occurs in less than 15 seconds after blood flow to the brain has stopped, and irreparable damage to the brain tissue occurs within 5 minutes.

Cerebrovascular disease, or stroke, occurs as a result of vascular compromise or hemorrhage and is one of the most frequent sources of neurologic disability.

Nearly half of the admissions to many busy neurologic services are because of strokes.

Cerebrovascular disease is the third most common cause of death.

Page 4: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Blood Supply to Brain

The brain is unusual in that it is only able to withstand very short periods of lack of blood supply (ischaemia). This is because neurons produce energy (ATP) almost entirely by oxidative metabolism of substrates including glucose and ketone bodies, with very limited capacity for anaerobic metabolism. Without oxygen, energy dependent processes cease leading to irreversible cellular injury if blood flow is not re-established rapidly (3 to8 minutes under most circumstances).

Therefore, adequate cerebral blood flow must be maintained to ensure a constant delivery of oxygen and substrates and to remove the waste products of metabolism

Cerebral blood flow (CBF) is dependent on a number of factors that can broadly be divided into: a. Those affecting cerebral perfusion pressure b. Those affecting the radius of cerebral blood vessels

Page 5: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Blood Supply of Brain & Applied aspects

internal carotid circulation

Vertebrobasilar circulation

Circle of Willis‘Stroke’Venous drainageCSF

Page 6: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Internal carotid artery

Arises from common carotid arteryEnters skull through carotid canal of

petrous bone & proceeds through cavernous sinus curving in an ‘S’ shape (carotid siphon)

Supplies rostral 2/3rds of brain including main parts of basal nuclei & internal capsule

Page 7: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

cerebral circulation

Page 8: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Internal carotid artery

gives off several collateral branches before it divides into its two terminal branches: middle cerebral artery & anterior cerebral artery

Page 9: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

ICA - collateral branches

inferior & superior hypophyseal arteries & the ophthalmic artery come off the ica as soon as the artery has entered the skull

posterior communicating & anterior choroidal arteries are the other named branches

Page 10: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Ophthalmic artery

Ophthalmic artery: It passes into the orbit through

the optic foramen. It supplies the structures of the

orbit, frontal and ethmoidal sinuses, frontal part of the scalp and dorsum of the nose.

Anterior choroidal artery: It supplies the optic tract,

choroid plexus of the lateral ventricle, hippocampus and some of the deep structures of the hemisphere, including the internal capsule and globus pallidus.

Page 11: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Ophthalmic artery

1. ethmoidal arteries

2. ciliary arteries

3. optic nerve & ophthalmic artery

4. central retinal artery

5. retinal arteries

6. supratrochlear artery

7. supraorbital artery

8. dorsal nasal artery

9. anterior ciliary artery

Page 12: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Middle cerebral artery

largest terminal branch of the icaruns between temporal & frontal lobes in

lateral fissuremany perforating branches (7-10 striate

arteries) emerge from the initial segment of the mca and penetrate the anterior perforating space to supply:striatum, putamen, globus pallidus & internal

capsule

Page 13: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

middle cerebral striate arteries

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middle cerebral artery

MCA divides into several large arteries on the surface of the insula

continues laterally to emerge on surface of hemisphere

practically the whole lateral surface of the brain including motor & sensory areas of the cortex is supplied by branches of the mca

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cortical distribution of MCA

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functional distribution of MCA

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anterior cerebral artery

smaller than middle cerebral arterythis terminal branch of the ica runs

between the optic nerve and anterior perforating space to the region of the longitudinal fissure

connected with the corresponding artery on the opposite side by the short anterior communicating artery

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anterior cerebral artery

perforating arteries to the hypothalamus and to other important structures in the basal parts of the brain arise from the proximal part of the ACA

distal to the anterior communicating artery the two ACA’s ascend in the longitudinal fissure (where they curve upwards & backwards above the corpus callosum)

Page 19: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

anterior cerebral artery

although the two arteries lie close together during their course in the longitudinal fissure they are separated by the falx cerebri

terminal ramifications of the aca supply most of the corpus callosum as well as the medial surfaces of the frontal & parietal lobes - including leg area in the paracentral lobule

Page 20: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

cortical distribution of ACA

Page 21: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

functional distribution of ACA

Page 22: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

vertebrobasilar system

two vertebral arteries (carrying about 1/3rd of cerebral blood) arise from first part of the subclavian arteries

ascend through foramen transversarium of cervical vertebrae then enter skull through foramen magnum

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vertebrobasilar system

major branches of vertebral arteryanterior spinal arteryposterior inferior cerebellar arterybulbar branches+/- anterior inferior cerebellar artery

both vertebral arteries unite at the pontomedullary junction to form the basilar artery

Page 24: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

vertebrobasilar system

basilar artery continues in midline of pons before it bifurcates into its two terminal posterior cerebral arteries at pontomesencephalic junction

gives off:anterior inferior cerebellar arteryinternal auditory arterypontine arteriessuperior cerebellar artery

Page 25: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

cortical distribution of PCA

Page 26: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

functional distribution of PCA

Page 27: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

the circle of Willis

anterior & posterior communicating arteries help form an arterial circle ‘of Willis’ on the ventral aspect of the brain

provides possibility of collateral circulation in event of occlusion in one of the major arteries proximal to the circle

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the ‘circle of Willis’

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regional blood supply

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stroke - definition“sudden neurological deficit of vascular

aetiology lasting more than 24 hours”compared with TIA (transient ischaemic attack)

indicates a transient neurological deficit of vascular origin lasting less than 24 hours

Page 31: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

stroke - categorized as

cerebral infarction (80%)signifying ischaemic brain damage due to

occlusion of a vessel

cerebral haemorrhageprimary pathology involves vascular rupture &

extravasation of blood into surrounding tissue or compartments

Page 32: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

stroke

artery territorymca occluson

aca occlusion

stroke syndromecontralateral hemiplegia,

hemianaesthesia, homonymous hemianopia, aphasia, inattention, cortical sensory loss

hemiparesischiefly in the leg

Page 33: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

stroke

artery territoryinternal carotid

artery occlusion

pca occlusion

stroke syndromemixture of aca & mca

syndromes (may be asymptomatic)

homonymous hemianopia, disconnection syndromes, hemianaesthesia, amnesia, midbrain & thalamic syndromes

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stroke

artery territoryvertebrobasilar

thrombosis (basilar occlusion)

ventral pontine infarction

stroke syndromequadriparesis, bulbar

paralysis, impaired gaze, coma

quadriparesis, absent horizontal (but retained

vertical) gaze, normal conscious state (‘locked in’ syndrome)

Page 35: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

stroke

artery territorylateral medullary

syndrome (vertebral, pica or aica)

stroke syndromeipsilateral ataxia (icp),

Horner’s syndrome, dysphagia & dysarthria (CN 9 & 10), vertigo, nausea & Nystagmus (vest. nuclei), ipsilateral facial anaesthesia (CN 5), contralateral pain & temperature loss (spinothalamic tract)

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stroke

artery territorymedial medullary

syndrome

stroke syndromeipsilateral paralysis of

tongue (CN 12), contralateral hemiparesis (corticospinal tract), contralateral impairment of touch & position sense (medial lemniscus)

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lateral medullary syndrome

Page 38: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

Weber syndrome

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venous drainage

superior sagittal sinus --> right transverse sinus (confluence of sinuses) --> right sigmoid sinus

inferior sagittal sinus --> straight sinus --> left transverse sinus (confluence of sinuses) --> left sigmoid sinus

the sigmoid sinuses --> (become) internal jugular veins at jugular foramen

Page 40: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

cavernous sinus

located lateral aspect sphenoidreceives blood from pituitary gland, orbit

through ophthalmic veins & middle cerebral veins

cavernous sinus --> superior & inferior petrosal sinuses

Page 41: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

cavernous sinus

superior petrosal sinus --> junction transverse & sigmoid sinuses

inferior petrosal sinus --> internal jugular vein

emissary veins link CS with facial & scalp veins

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cerebrospinal fluid circulation

clear & colorless water-like fluidformed by choroid plexus

mainly in lateral ventricles (& to lesser degree in 3rd & 4th ventricles)

formation of CSF complexincludes both passive filtration & active

secretary mechanisms

Page 45: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

CSF circulation

CSF produced in lateral ventricles enters third ventricle through interventricular

foramen

flows through cerebral aqueductinto fourth ventricle

from fourth ventricle it reaches the subarachnoid space

Page 46: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.
Page 47: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

CSF circulation

CSF enters subarachnoid space via three openings:median aperture (posterior medullary velum)two lateral apertures (lateral recesses of fourth

ventricle)

Page 48: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

CSF circulation

collections of microscopic arachnoid villi form macroscopic elevations (arachnoid granulations) that protrude into the lateral expansions of the superior sagittal sinus through openings in the dura

flow of CSF is fairly rapid

Page 49: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.
Page 50: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

CSF circulation

total volume of CSF in the ventricular system & subarachnoid space is only about 125 ml

but it is estimated that about four times that amount (~500 ml) is formed during a 24 hr period

a small amount of CSF seeps down around the spinal cord

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A 65-year-old man has loss of pain and temperature sensation on the right side of the face and on the left side of the body. Examination shows partial paralysis of the soft palate, larynx, and pharynx, and ataxia, all on the right. The most likely cause of these findings is thrombosis to which of the following arteries?

Basilar Right posterior inferior cerebellar Left posterior inferior cerebellar Right superior cerebellar Left superior cerebellar A 59-year-old male suffered a stroke and later presented with a spastic

paralysis. Which of the following structures was affected by the stroke that accounts for the spasticity? Ventral horn cells Corpus callosum Postcentral gyrus Internal capsule Substantia nigra

Page 52: Cerebral circulation & CSF. Indicate The Correct Letter Shown in the MRI to the appropriate sign or symptom given below. Difficulty in swallowing the.

A 81-year-old woman had a cerebrovascular accident month ago. Her past medical history is remarkable. She initially presented with slurred speech and right hemiparesis. The hemiparesis resolved, but her speech is still agrammatic and nonfluent, and she has difficulty finding words and completing sentences. Her comprehension is intact, and she appears frustrated when she attempts to speak. The remainder of the neurologic examination is normal. Which of the following best describes her deficit? Apraxia Ataxia Broca’s aphasia Wernicke’s aphasia

A 77-year-old right-handed man with a history of atrial fibrillation and diabetes mellitus is brought to the emergency department by his family. His son describes that when his father awoke that morning, he was unable to use words or sentences that made any sense. On examination, the patient has spontaneous, fluent speech, with normal grammatical constructs and prosody. However, the majority of what he says is meaningless. He is unable to follow commands, except to close his eyes. When asked to identify objects, he uses inappropriate substitutions of words. He also fails to repeat words and is unable to read. A lesion of which of the following areas would most likely account for his language deficits? Inferior frontal gyrus Crus cerebri Prefrontal cortex Superior temporal gyrus

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A 3-month-old infant was admitted to the pediatric ward because of a large head. The infant stayed quietly in bed most of the day. The circumference of the head was 44 cm (normal value for this age is about 40 cm). The fontanelles protruded, and the cranial sutures were separated. The skull could be transilluminated with a flashlight. Magnetic resonance imaging showed enlarged lateral, third, and fourth ventricles. The closure of the vertebrae was defective in the lower back (spina bifida). Treatment was surgical implantation of a catheter into the lateral ventricle with drainage into the peritoneum.

Is this a communicating or Non-communicating type of hydrocephalus? Communicating; because the CSF drainage is impaired within the

subarachnoid space or at the level of the arachnoid villi Noncommunicating; the fluid communication between the ventricular

system and the subarachnoid space is impaired None of above

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