Abstract
We describe a 63-year-old man with severe bilateral internal carotid artery disease who presented with repeated, brief attacks of left limb shaking precipitated by his standing up. Cerebral blood flow measured by xenon-133 inhalation showed reduced resting flows and a focal perfusion deficit in the right dorsofrontal and upper rolandic regions. Blood flow velocity and pulsatility index of the right middle cerebral artery measured by transcranial Doppler ultrasonography were also reduced. With hypercapnic challenge, both hemispheric tissue perfusion and blood flow velocity showed impaired reactivity. With induced hypotension, the focal perfusion deficit in the right dorsofrontal region was accentuated. Following right internal carotid endartectomy, resting cerebral blood flow and blood flow velocity improved, as did hypercapnic vasoreactivity. These reversible deficits in cerebral blood flow and vasoregulation, which were maximal in the dorsofrontal region, are consistent with low perfusion in the border zone territory or the distal fields and demonstrate that hemodynamic failure is the likely mechanism for limb-shaking transient ischemic attacks from severe carotid artery disease.
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