Strokes restricted to the insular cortex

Carlo W. Cereda(University Hospital of Lausanne), Joseph Ghika(University Hospital of Lausanne), Philippe Maeder(University Hospital of Lausanne), Julien Bogousslavsky(University Hospital of Lausanne)
Neurology
December 24, 2002
Cited by 305

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To characterize clinically acute insular strokes from four patients with a first ever acute stroke restricted to the insula on MRI. METHODS: The authors studied the clinical presentation of four patients with a first ever acute stroke restricted to the insula on MRI. RESULTS: The authors found five main groups of clinical presentations: 1) somatosensory deficits in three patients with posterior insular stroke (two with a transient pseudothalamic sensory syndrome, one with partial distribution); 2) gustatory disorder in a patient with left posterior insular infarct; 3) vestibular-like syndrome, with dizziness, gait instability, and tendency to fall, but no nystagmus, in three patients with posterior insular strokes; 4) cardiovascular disturbances, consisting of hypertensive episodes in a patient with a right posterior insular infarct; and 5) neuropsychological disorders, including aphasia (left posterior insula), dysarthria, and transient somatoparaphrenia (right posterior insula). CONCLUSION: Strokes restricted to the posterior insula may present with pseudothalamic sensory and vestibular-like syndromes as prominent clinical manifestations, but also dysarthria and aphasia (in left lesions), somatoparaphrenia (right lesions) and gustatory dysfunction and blood pressure with hypertensive episodes in right lesions; we did not find acute dysphagia reported in anterior, insular strokes.


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