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Malignant MCA Infarction: Pathophysiology and Imaging for Early Diagnosis and Management Decisions
Author(s) -
Wolf-Dieter Heiß
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cerebrovascular diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.221
H-Index - 104
eISSN - 1421-9786
pISSN - 1015-9770
DOI - 10.1159/000441627
Subject(s) - medicine , penumbra , infarction , edema , stroke (engine) , ischemia , midline shift , pathophysiology , intracranial pressure , radiology , cerebral edema , hemiparesis , pathology , cardiology , lesion , myocardial infarction , hematoma , mechanical engineering , engineering
Malignant middle cerebral artery infarction is a devastating condition, with up to 80% mortality in conservatively treated patients. The pathophysiology of this stroke is characterized by a large core of severe ischemia and only a relatively small rim of penumbra. Due to the fast development of irreversible morphological damage, cytotoxic edema occurs immediately in a large portion of the ischemic territory. The subsequent damage of the tight junctions leads to the breakdown of the blood brain barrier and vasogenic brain edema, resulting in space-occupying brain swelling. The progressive vasogenic edema reaches its maximum after 1 to several days and exerts a mechanical force on surrounding tissue structures leading to midline shift and transtentorial herniation and finally brain stem compression and death.

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