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August 01, 1993; 43 (8) Article

The etiology of posterior circulation infarcts

A prospective study using magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance angiography

J. Bogousslavsky, F. Regli, P. Maeder, R. Meuli, J. Nader
First published August 1, 1993, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.43.8.1528
J. Bogousslavsky
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F. Regli
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P. Maeder
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R. Meuli
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J. Nader
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Citation
The etiology of posterior circulation infarcts
A prospective study using magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance angiography
J. Bogousslavsky, F. Regli, P. Maeder, R. Meuli, J. Nader
Neurology Aug 1993, 43 (8) 1528; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.43.8.1528

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Abstract

In a prospective study of 70 patients with infarcts in the posterior circulation admitted consecutively to a population-based primary-care center, we assessed infarct location and etiology using magnetic resonance imaging, three-dimensional time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography, and noninvasive cardiac tests. The brain-stem (mainly the paramedian pons) was the most commonly infarcted site (41/70, 59%), followed by the cerebellum (33/70, 47%). Combined supra- and infratentorial multiple vertebrobasilar infarcts occurred in 11 patients (16%). Overall, 27 patients (39%) had ≥50% stenosis or occlusion of the basilar artery. There were other large-artery lesions in 19 patients (27%), including vertebral (V2-V4) stenosis or occlusion (in seven) and dolichoectatic vertebral/basilar arteries (in 12). Fifteen of the 70 patients had a potential cardiac source of embolism, which coexisted with large-artery disease in more than one-third of the cases. Cerebellar infarct without concomitant brainstem or occipital infarct was associated with cardioembolism (67%), while isolated paramedian pontine or midbrain infarct was associated with basilar artery stenosis (71%), suggesting in situ occlusion of the mouth of the perforators off the stenosed basilar artery. After exclusion of other potential causes of stroke, presumed small-artery disease associated with chronic hypertension remained the likely etiology in only 11 patients (16%), but these infarcts were not associated with any of the classical lacunar syndromes. Our findings emphasize the high frequency of severe intracranial large-artery disease in posterior circulation infarcts.

  • © 1993 by the American Academy of Neurology

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