J Heart Stroke | Volume 5, Issue 1 | Case Report | Open Access
Samson Erkabu1*, Biniam Barega1, Hailu Dessallegn2 and Eyoel Negash2
1Department of Internal Medicine, Ras Desta Damtew Memorial Hospital, Ethiopia 2Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Ras Desta Damtew Memorial Hospital, Ethiopia
*Correspondance to: Samson Erkabu
Fulltext PDFBilateral Anterior Cerebral Artery (ACA) territory infarction is not a common phenomenon. It is commonly a result of vasospasm of vessels following subarachnoid hemorrhage in the territory of ACA or it could be because of thrombosis. Patients with bilateral anterior infarction have different clinical presentations. We report a patient who comes with quadriparesis and seizure after bilateral ACA infarction.
Bilateral cerebral infarction; Anterior cerebral artery; Quadriparesis and seizure
Erkabu S, Barega B, Dessallegn H, Negash E. Quadriparesis and Seizure from Bilateral Anterior Cerebral Artery Infarction: A Case Report. J Heart Stroke. 2020; 5(1): 1059.