such as nonatherosclerotic vasculopathies, hypercoagulable states, or hematologic disorders. Patients in this category should exhibit clinical symptoms and CT or MRI findings indicative of acute ischemic stroke, regardless of the size or location of the lesion. Diagnostic tests, such as blood...
0: Normal movement 1: Partial gaze palsy 2: Forced deviation or complete gaze palsy3: Visual fields Present visual stimuli in the patient's visual field quadrants. 0: No visual loss 1: Partial hemianopia 2: Complete hemianopia 3: Bilateral hemianopia (or blindness) 4...
If the shift oc- curred, participants were instructed to re-orient their navigation towards the new target location as soon as possible. Detection task The target appeared at the following 5 possible angles (±30, ±15, 0°) with randomized onset times. Participants were instructed to press ...
presented results on the spatial distribution of fixations revealed that both unilateral neglect patients and those who recovered from the syndrome show a pronounced orientation bias towards their ipsilesional side as reflected in the mean and median horizontal gaze position in relation to their lesion ...
Structural MRI data acquired from 47 sub-acute stroke patients used for the DFSs analyses were used to measure each lesion’s anatomical impact at the voxel level. Lesions were manually segmented on each patient’s structural MRI scans using the Analyze software package96. The T1-weighted, T2-...
He had forced right gaze deviation, left hemianopsia, moderate left arm and leg weakness. NCCT identified hyperdense right MCA sign. The ASPECT score was 10 (Figure 1I). The mCTA showed an occlusion of the right proximal M2 segment of the MCA with a good collateral flow (Figure 1J). ...