A. 14 - Clinical syndromes of impaired circulation of the internal carotid artery COPY Flashcards
how impaired circulation of the internal carotid artery may present?
May present in a stuttering manner due to progressing narrowing of the lumen or recurrent emboli
Signs and symptoms of impaired circulation of the internal carotid artery?
most extreme cases there may be:
○ Deterioration of consciousness
○ Homonymous hemianopia of the contralat side
○ Contralat hemiplegia
○ Contralat hemisensory disturbance
○ Gaze palsy to opposite side, eyes deviated to the side of lesion
●A partial Horner’s sy. may develop (SY fibers on the ICA wall)
● Occlusion of the dominant hemisphere → global aphasia
Examination of impaired circulation of the internal carotid artery?
● Absent carotid pulsation at the jaw angle w/ poorly conducted heart sounds along ICA
● Prodromal symptoms prior to occlusion, like temporary monocular blindness and transient hemisensory/hemimotor disturbance
● The outcome of carotid occlusion depends on the collateral blood supply primarily from circle of
Willis and also ECA
where does Ant. Cerebral Art. comes from and what is its course and what it supplies?
● Branch from ICA running above optic n. to follow the curve of corpus
callosum, joined by ant. communicating artery close to the
origin and it gives deep branches into
internal capsule and basal nuclei
● Cortical branches supply the medial
surface of the hemisphere (orbital,
frontal, parietal)
what does the Clinical features of Ant. cerebral Art. depends on?
- site of occlusion (in relation to ant. communicating art.) and
- anatomical
variation
what are the Clinical features of Proximal occlusion of Ant. cerebral Art.?
normally well tolerated because of the cross flow through ant. communicating art.
what are the Clinical features of Distal occlusion of Ant. cerebral Art.?
weakness and cortical sensory loss in contralat lower limb
w/ associated incontinence
occasionally contralat
grasp reflex
what are the Clinical features of Proximal occlusion when both ant. cerebral aa arise from the same side of Ant. cerebral Art.?
cerebral paraplegia w/ lower limb weakness,
sensory loss,
incontinence
and grasp, snout and palmomental reflexes
what are the Clinical features of Bilateral frontal lobe infarction related to Ant. cerebral Art.?
akinetic mutism, deterioration in conscious level
where does Middle cerebral artery comes from and what is its course and what it supplies?
The largest branch of ICA passing to the lateral surface of the hemisphere and giving off:
1) Deep branches (perforating vessels) supplying ant. limb of internal capsule and part of basal nuclei
2) Cortical branches
3) Temporal
4) Frontal
5) Parietal
what does the Clinical features of Middle cerebral artery depends on?
- site of occlusion
- whether the dominant/non-dominant hemisphere is affected
if occlusion of the middle cerebral artery occurs at the insula which branches are involved?
what are the symptoms?
all cortical branches are involved
■ Contralat hemiplegia
■ Contralat hemianesthesia and hemianopia
■ Aphasia (dominant)
■ Neglect of contralat limbs and dressing difficulty (non-dominant)
what happens if cortical branches of MCA are affected individually?
clinical picture is less severe
what happens if deep branches of MCA are affected?
deep branches may be a source of hemorrhage and small infarcts