3.8 Article

A patient with bilateral medial medullary infarction: Clinical and magnetic resonance imaging findings

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.inat.2021.101126

Keywords

Medulla oblongata; Magnetic resonance angiography; Basi-parallel anatomical scanning

Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [JP19K19835]

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A rare case of bilateral medial medullary infarctions was reported, with a 64-year-old patient showing typical clinical symptoms and diagnosed through multiple imaging examinations. The infarctions were likely caused by atherosclerosis in the bilateral vertebral arteries. The combined use of TOF-MRA and BPAS-MRI could improve diagnostic accuracy and aid in post-stroke management.
We report a patient with bilateral medial medullary infarctions, which is a rare type of ischemic stroke. A 64year-old Japanese man demonstrated bilateral hemiplegia, sensory dysfunction, ataxia, and dysphagia. The left-dominant but bilateral medial medulla lesions indicated hyperintensity on the T2-weighted image at 1.5 months after the onset. On the time-of-flight magnetic resonance angiography (TOF-MRA) performed at the onset, the right vertebral artery was partially narrowed and the left vertebral artery was not confirmed. Basiparallel anatomical scanning-magnetic resonance imaging (BPAS-MRI) revealed that both sides of the vertebral arteries had a uniform diameter, which means there was no arterial hypoplasia nor arterial dissection. These results suggest that atherosclerosis in the bilateral vertebral artery caused occlusion of the perforator artery, resulting in the bilateral medial medullary infarctions. The combined use of TOF-MRA and BPAS-MRI could help improve the accuracy of diagnosis and be helpful for post-stroke management.

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