Abstract

Bilateral cerebral peduncles are rarely simultaneously infarcted unless the basilar artery is involved. A 60-year-old man developed locked-in syndrome because of bilateral cerebral peduncle infarctions with right intracranial vertebral artery occlusion. Dysarthria occurred a day before admission. His neurological condition rapidly deteriorated, and he subsequently became quadriplegic. His left vertebral artery showed a posterior inferior cerebellar artery end pattern, and anastomosis between the anterior and posterior circulations through the hypoplastic right P1 and fine left posterior communicating artery was insufficient; therefore, severe hypoperfusion and multiple infarctions in the distribution of the posterior circulation were induced by right intracranial vertebral artery occlusion. These findings highlight the fact that large-artery atherosclerosis represents an important cause of mesencephalic infarctions. Several neurological manifestations are caused by intracranial vertebral artery occlusion, and when collateral flow to the posterior circulation is insufficient, intracranial vertebral artery occlusion results in bilateral cerebral peduncle infarctions and locked-in syndrome without basilar artery occlusion.

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