DIENCEPHALON CLINICAL Flashcards
Most thalamic infarcts are reported in the _________supplied by the geniculotha-lamic and paramedian arteries
posterolateral and the medial thalamic territories
posterolateral thalamic territory infarcts SX
pansensory loss contralateral to the lesion, paresthesia, and thalamic pain.
. In this syndrome, severe, persistent, paroxysmal, and often intolerable pain (tha-lamic pain) resistant to analgesic medications occurs at the time of injury or following a period of transient hemiparesis, hemiataxia, choreiform movements, and hemisensory loss.
Dejerine and Roussy
secondary to occlusion of the tuberothalamic branch of the posterior COM artery
Anterolateral Thalamic Territory
clinical findings in Anterolateral Thalamic Territory stroke
the clinical manifestations include contralateral hemiparesis, visual field defects, facial paresis with emotional stimulation, and rarely, hemisensory loss. Severe, usually transient neuropsychological impairments predominate in lesions in this thalamic territory
Infarcts in the lateral territory of the thalamus are associated with occlusion of____________
occlusion of the anterior choroidal branch of the internal carotid artery.
structures involved in Infarcts in the lateral territory of the thalamus
posterior limb of the internal capsule, lateral thalamic nuclei (lateral geniculate, ventral posterior lateral, pulvinar, reticular), and medial temporal lobe
territory associated with occlusion of the posterior choroidal branch of the posterior cerebral artery.
Posterior Thalamic Territory
structures involved in Posterior Thalamic Territory stroke
Thalamic nuclei involved include the lateral geniculate, pulvinar, and dorsolateral nuclei.
clinical manifestations of Posterior Thalamic Territory stroke
contralateral homonymous quadrantanopsia and hemihypesthesia, as well as neuropsychological deficits, including memory defects and transcortical aphasia
Thalamic structures critical for memory
nterior nuclei, midline and intralaminar nuclei, dorsomedial nucleus, and mamillothalamic tract.
Cortical activation of thalamus for arousal
(1) an indirect mechanism, via the thalamus, comprised of the ascending reticular activating system (ARAS), and
(2) a direct mechanism (nonthalamic), via cholinergic, serotonergic, noradrenergic, and histaminergic arousal systems that originate in the brain stem, basal forebrain, or hypothalamus and do not pass through the thalamus.
Cheiro-Oral Syndrome
confined to one hand and to the ipsilateral mouth region.
It is associated with focal lesions in the ventral posterior thalamic nucleus
unwilled, uncontrollable movements of an upper limb together with failure to recognize ownership of a limb in the absence of visual cues.
The Alien Hand Syndrome
lesions associated with alien hand
corpus callosum and mesial frontal area
posterolateral and anterolateral thalamic territories