Parieto-cerebellar Loop Impairment in Ataxic Hemiparesis:
Proposed Pathophysiology Based on an Analysis of Cerebral
Blood Flow
Ezzedine Attig

Abstract:
Sixteen stroke patients suffering from ataxic hemiparesis
syndrome were studied with regional cerebral blood flow measured
by 133-Xenon inhalation technique (12 patients) and by SPECT
(HMPAO) (9 patients). The causative lesions (hematoma in 7 and
infarct in 9), unilateral in 15 patients and bilateral in 1,
were located in the posterior two-thirds of the corona radiata,
thalamo- capsular and subthalamus regions, or cerebral peduncle.
Ataxia of the cerebellar type was unilateral in 15 patients
and bilateral in 1 with similar, deep, bilateral causative lesions.
Four patients presented some characteristics of proprioceptive
ataxia (mixed ataxia). Associated cognitive disturbances were
present in 9 patients and absent in 7. Eleven of the 12 subjects
studied by 133-Xenon inhalation technique showed limited centro-parietal
hypoperfusion, mainly in the inferior parietal lobule, ipsilateral
to the causative lesion and bilaterally in the patient with
bilateral lesions and ataxia. Ipsilateral hypoperfusion was
confirmed in 7/9 patients studied by SPECT, which also demonstrated
contralateral cerebellar hypoperfusion in 4 patients. These
findings suggest that ataxic hemiparesis syndrome results from
functional depression (diaschisis) consequent to the interruption
at many levels of an "inferior parietal associative cortex -
cerebellar anterior lobe" circuit.
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Can.
J. Neurol. Sci. 1994; 21: 15-23
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