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July 01, 1994; 44 (7) Articles

Atheromatous embolism in the brain

A clinicopathologic analysis of 15 autopsy cases

J. Masuda, C. Yutani, J. Ogata, Y. Kuriyama, T. Yamaguchi
First published July 1, 1994, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.44.7.1231
J. Masuda
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C. Yutani
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J. Ogata
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Y. Kuriyama
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T. Yamaguchi
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Citation
Atheromatous embolism in the brain
A clinicopathologic analysis of 15 autopsy cases
J. Masuda, C. Yutani, J. Ogata, Y. Kuriyama, T. Yamaguchi
Neurology Jul 1994, 44 (7) 1231; DOI: 10.1212/WNL.44.7.1231

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Abstract

We report 15 autopsy cases with cerebral atheromatous embolism (14 men and one woman, 57 to 76 years of age) and analyze their pathologic features. Cardiovascular surgery or catheterization triggered the atheromatous embolism in the brain in six cases (aortocoronary bypass, two; emergency aortocoronary bypass after percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, one; graft implantation for thoracic aortic aneurysm, two; coronary angiography, one). The events that had triggered embolism were not clear in the remaining nine cases. Pathologic examination of the brains revealed that nine cases had single or multiple cortical hemorrhagic infarcts corresponding to the border zones between two main cerebral arterial territories. Many of the leptomeningeal arteries located in the subarachnoid spaces of cortical sulci and surfaces adjacent to the infarcts were occluded by atheromatous emboli composed mostly of cholesterol crystals. The internal diameters of the occluded arteries ranged from 50 to 300 μm. Arterial territorial infarcts were present in six cases, three of which had thromboemboli containing various amounts of cholesterol crystals occluding the major arteries or their large branches supplying the infarcted areas, which were pale in two cases and hemorrhagic in one. The other three cases had hemorrhagic infarcts in which atheromatous emboli were present only in the small leptomeningeal arteries and were composed mostly of cholesterol crystals. Atheromatous embolism in the brain frequently causes border-zone infarcts by occlusion of the terminal cortical branches, and sometimes causes arterial territorial infarcts if the emboli are associated with fibrin and sufficiently large to occlude the larger arteries.

  • © 1994 by the American Academy of Neurology

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