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Changes of blood flow in the cerebral cortex after subcortical ischemic infarction.
Stroke. 1989 Feb; 20(2):211-6.S

Abstract

The two-dimensional xenon-133 inhalation method was used to measure cortical blood flow in 16 patients with small subcortical ischemic infarcts and in 10 patients with larger cortical infarcts in the chronic phase of stroke. An abnormal hemispheric asymmetry of blood flow was seen, not only in patients with cortical infarcts, but also in those with subcortical infarcts. In the patients with subcortical infarcts, focal areas of reduced cortical blood flow were seen in the symptomatic hemisphere remote from the tissue destruction, usually including part of the noninfarcted frontoparietal cortex. The cortical dysfunction may have contributed to the clinical manifestations including aphasia, which was present in 14 of the 16 patients with subcortical lesions.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Neurology, Odense University Hospital, Denmark.No affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

2919411

Citation

Højer-Pedersen, E, and O F. Petersen. "Changes of Blood Flow in the Cerebral Cortex After Subcortical Ischemic Infarction." Stroke, vol. 20, no. 2, 1989, pp. 211-6.
Højer-Pedersen E, Petersen OF. Changes of blood flow in the cerebral cortex after subcortical ischemic infarction. Stroke. 1989;20(2):211-6.
Højer-Pedersen, E., & Petersen, O. F. (1989). Changes of blood flow in the cerebral cortex after subcortical ischemic infarction. Stroke, 20(2), 211-6.
Højer-Pedersen E, Petersen OF. Changes of Blood Flow in the Cerebral Cortex After Subcortical Ischemic Infarction. Stroke. 1989;20(2):211-6. PubMed PMID: 2919411.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Changes of blood flow in the cerebral cortex after subcortical ischemic infarction. AU - Højer-Pedersen,E, AU - Petersen,O F, PY - 1989/2/1/pubmed PY - 1989/2/1/medline PY - 1989/2/1/entrez SP - 211 EP - 6 JF - Stroke JO - Stroke VL - 20 IS - 2 N2 - The two-dimensional xenon-133 inhalation method was used to measure cortical blood flow in 16 patients with small subcortical ischemic infarcts and in 10 patients with larger cortical infarcts in the chronic phase of stroke. An abnormal hemispheric asymmetry of blood flow was seen, not only in patients with cortical infarcts, but also in those with subcortical infarcts. In the patients with subcortical infarcts, focal areas of reduced cortical blood flow were seen in the symptomatic hemisphere remote from the tissue destruction, usually including part of the noninfarcted frontoparietal cortex. The cortical dysfunction may have contributed to the clinical manifestations including aphasia, which was present in 14 of the 16 patients with subcortical lesions. SN - 0039-2499 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/2919411/Changes_of_blood_flow_in_the_cerebral_cortex_after_subcortical_ischemic_infarction_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -