Strokes in the subinsular territory
Clinical, topographical, and etiological patterns
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Abstract
The authors studied 11 patients with subinsular stroke (subIS) located in a deep border zone between lenticulostriate arteries and small insular cortical penetrating branches of the middle cerebral artery. The typical clinical features of subIS were motor deficits (11 patients), sensory disturbances (6 patients), transcortical motor aphasia and hypophonia (2 patients), and transient dysphagia at stroke onset (5 patients). Large artery disease and cardioembolic mechanisms may give rise to subIS by hemodynamic mechanisms.
- Received May 24, 2004.
- Accepted in final form July 30, 2004.
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Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- Reply to Lanska
- Emre Kumral, Ege University, Department of Neurology, Stroke Unit, Bornova, Izmir, 35100, Turkey[email protected]
Submitted April 21, 2005 - Strokes in the subinsular territory: Clinical, topographical, and etiological patterns
- Douglas J. Lanska, VA Medical Center, 500 E. Veterans St., Tomah, WI 54660[email protected]
Submitted April 21, 2005 - Reply to Iwasaki et al
- Emre Kumral, Stroke and Neuropsychology Unit, Department of Neurology, Ege University, Bornova, Izmir, 35100, Turkey[email protected]
Submitted March 01, 2005 - Strokes in the subinsular territory: Clinical, topographical, and etiological patterns
- Yasuo Iwasaki, Toho University Omori Hospital, 6-11-1 Omorinishi Ota-ku Tokyo 143-8541 JAPAN[email protected]
- Osamu Igarashi, Yasumitsu Ichikawa and Ken Ikeda
Submitted March 01, 2005
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