WBR0581: Difference between revisions
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|MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | |MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | ||
|SubCategory=Neurology | |SubCategory=Neurology | ||
|MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | |||
|MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | |MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | ||
|MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | |MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | ||
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|MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | |MainCategory=Anatomy, Pathophysiology | ||
|SubCategory=Neurology | |SubCategory=Neurology | ||
|Prompt=A 68 year old man with past history of coronary artery disease presents for acute onset severe vertigo and nausea. The patient explains that he was cooking dinner when all of a sudden he felt the room turn and he fell to the ground. His wife also noticed that his right eye was looking funny and that he sounded unusually hoarse. On exam, you notice drooping of the right eyelid and unequal pupils with right miosis. You also detect loss of pain and temperature sensation from the left torso and arm and the right face. When asked to walk, the patient exhibits ataxic gait, frequently falling toward the right. An MRI shows an area of hyperintensity localized to the brainstem. Which of the following arteries is most likely occluded in this patient? | |Prompt=A 68-year-old man with past history of coronary artery disease presents for acute onset severe vertigo and nausea. The patient explains that he was cooking dinner when all of a sudden he felt the room turn and he fell to the ground. His wife also noticed that his right eye was looking funny and that he sounded unusually hoarse. On exam, you notice drooping of the right eyelid and unequal pupils with right miosis. You also detect loss of pain and temperature sensation from the left torso and arm and the right face. When asked to walk, the patient exhibits ataxic gait, frequently falling toward the right. An MRI shows an area of hyperintensity localized to the brainstem. Which of the following arteries is most likely occluded in this patient? | ||
[[Image:Brain_vascular.jpg|500px]] | [[Image:Brain_vascular.jpg|500px]] | ||
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[[Image:AICA_vs_PICA.jpg|700px]] | [[Image:AICA_vs_PICA.jpg|700px]] | ||
|AnswerA=A | |AnswerA=A | ||
|AnswerAExp=This refers to the left [[posterior cerebral artery]] (PCA). Occlusion of the PCA leads to an infarct to the [[occipital cortex]] specifically the visual cortex. Classically, this presents with homonymous [[hemianopia]] with macular sparing. | |AnswerAExp=This refers to the left [[posterior cerebral artery]] (PCA). Occlusion of the PCA leads to an infarct to the [[occipital cortex]] specifically the visual cortex. Classically, this presents with homonymous [[hemianopia]] with macular sparing. | ||
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|AnswerE=E | |AnswerE=E | ||
|AnswerEExp=This refers to the left PICA whose occlusion would lead to the same syndrome seen in our patient but the crossed deficit would be inverted (left face with right body). | |AnswerEExp=This refers to the left PICA whose occlusion would lead to the same syndrome seen in our patient but the crossed deficit would be inverted (left face with right body). | ||
|EducationalObjectives=PICA lesions present with lateral medullary syndrome characterized by crossed sensory deficits, vertigo, ataxia, ipsilateral Horner's syndrome, and nucleus ambiguus symptoms including dysphagia, hoarsness, and loss of gag reflex. | |||
|References=Kim JS, Lee JH, Suh DC, Lee MC. Spectrum of lateral medullary syndrome. Correlation between clinical findings and magnetic resonance imaging in 33 subjects. Stroke. 1994;25(7):1405-10. | |||
|RightAnswer=D | |RightAnswer=D | ||
|WBRKeyword=PICA, AICA, Wallenburg, Lateral medullary syndrome, Brainstem, Stroke | |WBRKeyword=PICA, AICA, Wallenburg, Lateral medullary syndrome, Brainstem, Stroke | ||
|Approved= | |Approved=Yes | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 13:32, 12 September 2014
Author | [[PageAuthor::Rim Halaby, M.D. [1]]] |
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Exam Type | ExamType::USMLE Step 1 |
Main Category | MainCategory::Anatomy, MainCategory::Pathophysiology |
Sub Category | SubCategory::Neurology |
Prompt | [[Prompt::A 68-year-old man with past history of coronary artery disease presents for acute onset severe vertigo and nausea. The patient explains that he was cooking dinner when all of a sudden he felt the room turn and he fell to the ground. His wife also noticed that his right eye was looking funny and that he sounded unusually hoarse. On exam, you notice drooping of the right eyelid and unequal pupils with right miosis. You also detect loss of pain and temperature sensation from the left torso and arm and the right face. When asked to walk, the patient exhibits ataxic gait, frequently falling toward the right. An MRI shows an area of hyperintensity localized to the brainstem. Which of the following arteries is most likely occluded in this patient? |
Answer A | AnswerA::A |
Answer A Explanation | [[AnswerAExp::This refers to the left posterior cerebral artery (PCA). Occlusion of the PCA leads to an infarct to the occipital cortex specifically the visual cortex. Classically, this presents with homonymous hemianopia with macular sparing.]] |
Answer B | AnswerB::B |
Answer B Explanation | [[AnswerBExp::This refers to the left anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA). Occlusion of the AICA can present with features similar to our patient; however, nucleus ambiguus dysfunction (hoarsness, dysphagia, and absent gag reflex) is unusual. Instead AICA lesions present with isult to the facial and cochlear nuclei.]] |
Answer C | AnswerC::C |
Answer C Explanation | [[AnswerCExp::This refers to the middle cerebral artery(MCA). Occlusion of the MCA in the dominant hemisphere leads to contralateral facial and upper extremity sensory-motor deficits. Crossed deficits are not seen in MCA strokes. MCA strokes can also lead to aphasia.]] |
Answer D | AnswerD::D |
Answer D Explanation | [[AnswerDExp::This refers to the right posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) whose occlusion would explain the symptoms seen in our patient. PICA lesions present with crossed sensory deficits (ipsilateral face vs. contralateral body) and classically, nucleus ambiguus dysfunction.]] |
Answer E | AnswerE::E |
Answer E Explanation | AnswerEExp::This refers to the left PICA whose occlusion would lead to the same syndrome seen in our patient but the crossed deficit would be inverted (left face with right body). |
Right Answer | RightAnswer::D |
Explanation | [[Explanation::![]()
|
Approved | Approved::Yes |
Keyword | WBRKeyword::PICA, WBRKeyword::AICA, WBRKeyword::Wallenburg, WBRKeyword::Lateral medullary syndrome, WBRKeyword::Brainstem, WBRKeyword::Stroke |
Linked Question | Linked:: |
Order in Linked Questions | LinkedOrder:: |