Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Lacunar infarcts

Lacunar infarcts are small (0.2 to 15 mm in diameter) noncortical infarcts caused by occlusion of a single penetrating branch of a large cerebral artery.

Frontal Lobe Hypometabolism Predicts Cognitive Decline in Patients
http://idealab.ucdavis.edu/

Stroke Pathophysiology
Sid Shah, MD
http://www.uic.edu/

Stroke: An Introduction to Diagnosis
Stephen E. Nadeau, M.D
http://medinfo.ufl.edu

Counting Cavitating Lacunes Underestimates the Burden of Lacunar Infarction
Gillian M. Potter, Fergus N. Doubal, Caroline A. Jackson, Francesca M. Chappell et al
http://depts.washington.edu/

The Blood Supply of the Brain
Relating Vascular and Functional Anatomy
http://www.umassmed.edu/

Dysarthria in acute ischemic stroke Lesion topography, clinicoradiologic correlation,and etiology
P.P. Urban, MD; S. Wicht, MD; G. Vukurevic, PhD; C. Fitzek, MD; S. Fitzek, MD; P. Stoeter, MD;C. Massinger, MD; and H.C. Hopf, MD
http://www.neurosurg.wisc.edu/

An Inverse Association of Cardiovascular Risk and Frontal Glucose Metabolism
Natalie Denburg, PhD: Kuczynski, B., Jagust, W., Chui, H.C., & Reed, B
http://www.healthcare.uiowa.edu/

Diseases of the Nervous System
http://medsci.indiana.edu/

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