Porencephaly and intraparenchymal hyperacute infarct due to bilateral anterior cerebral artery embolism in adult: A rare case

Authors

  • Ricky Suryamin General Practitioner, Department of Radiology, University of Christian Krida Wacana https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4310-0285
  • Subagia Santosa Sudjono Radiologist, Department of Radiology, Mayapada Hospital, Tangerang, Indonesia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/ajms.v12i6.34593

Keywords:

Porencephaly, cerebrospinal fluid, MRI, space-occupying lesion

Abstract

Porencephaly is a very unique rare neurological disease identified by the presence of single or multiple cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) cyst inside the brain matter. This is an intra-cranial cyst that rarely occurs in adults. The diagnosis depends on a well-defined CSF fluid space-occupying lesion (SOL) that communicates with the ventricles on a CT scan or MRI of the brain. Cerebral damage during labor or as unknown trauma during infancy can present with porencephaly much later in life. This might be the aftermath of trauma, ischemic, infection or bleeding in the postnatal life. These cysts may be mild enough to show any symptoms or severe enough to cause mental and physical disability. Here we present a case of a 76-year-old female attended in the emergency department with loss of strength in her right arm, four days ago. Porencephaly in adult is a rare neurological disease case. In this case, porencephaly caused by stroke ischemic 4 years ago due to anterior carotid artery embolism.

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Published

2021-06-01

How to Cite

Suryamin, R., & Sudjono, S. S. (2021). Porencephaly and intraparenchymal hyperacute infarct due to bilateral anterior cerebral artery embolism in adult: A rare case. Asian Journal of Medical Sciences, 12(6), 138–141. https://doi.org/10.3126/ajms.v12i6.34593

Issue

Section

Case Report and Review of Literature