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Lateral Medullary Syndrome (Wallenberg Syndrome):
- Affected Artery: Posterior Inferior Cerebellar Artery (PICA) or its branches.
- Clinical Manifestations:
- Body Representation:
- Contralateral loss of pain and temperature sensation in the arm and leg (via the spinothalamic tract).
- Ipsilateral ataxia in the arm and leg (via the spinocerebellar tract).
- Ipsilateral loss of pain and temperature sensation in the face (sensory nucleus of trigeminal nerve).
- Other Features:
- Horner’s syndrome (ipsilateral eye ptosis, anhidrosis, and miosis).
- Vertigo, nystagmus (vestibular nucleus).
- Loss of gag reflex (vagus nerve).
- Dysphagia (nucleus ambiguus and glossopharyngeal nerves).
- Body Representation:
-
Medial Medullary Syndrome (Dejerine Syndrome):
- Affected Artery: Anterior Spinal Artery or its branches.
- Clinical Manifestations:
- Body Representation:
- Contralateral weakness in the arm and leg (corticospinal tract).
- Contralateral loss of vibration and proprioception (medial lemniscus).
- Other Features:
- Internuclear ophthalmoplegia (ipsilateral eye deviation during attempted lateral gaze).
- Deviation of the tongue toward the side of the lesion (hypoglossal nerve).
- Body Representation:
These syndromes result from vascular occlusion or mass effect within the brainstem.
References:
(1)researchgate.net
(2)pubs.rsna.org
(3)pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Verified by Dr. Petya Stefanova