Cerebral Vascular Syndromes - Stroke Strikes
Homunculus representation is key for localization. All deficits contralateral unless specified.
| Artery | Territory (Homunculus Focus) | Motor/Sensory Loss Emphasis | Key Specific Signs |
|---|---|---|---|
| ACA | Medial cortex (Leg/Foot) | Lower Limb > Upper/Face | Urinary incontinence, abulia, grasp reflex. |
| MCA | Lateral cortex (Face/Arm/Speech) | Upper Limb/Face > Lower | Dominant: Aphasia (Broca's/Wernicke's). Non-dominant: Hemineglect. Homonymous hemianopia. |
| PCA | Occipital, medial temporal | Primarily Visual | Cortical blindness (macular sparing), alexia without agraphia, memory loss. |
⭐ Gerstmann syndrome (acalculia, agraphia, finger agnosia, right-left disorientation) can occur with dominant parietal lobe lesions, often involving the angular gyrus supplied by MCA territory.
Brainstem Syndromes - Brainstem Blues
📌 Rule of 4s: For lesion localization.
- Midbrain Syndromes:
- Weber's: Ipsilateral CN III palsy; contralateral hemiplegia (corticospinal tract).
- Benedikt's: Ipsilateral CN III palsy; contralateral ataxia & tremor (red nucleus, medial lemniscus).
- Parinaud's (Dorsal Midbrain): Vertical gaze palsy (esp. upward), light-near dissociation, convergence-retraction nystagmus.
- Pontine Syndromes:
- Millard-Gubler: Ipsilateral CN VI & CN VII palsy; contralateral hemiplegia (corticospinal tract).
- Medullary Syndromes:
- Wallenberg's (Lateral Medullary): Ipsilateral: ataxia, Horner's syndrome, loss of facial pain/temp (CN V), dysphagia, hoarseness (CN IX, X). Contralateral: loss of body pain/temp (spinothalamic tract).

- Wallenberg's (Lateral Medullary): Ipsilateral: ataxia, Horner's syndrome, loss of facial pain/temp (CN V), dysphagia, hoarseness (CN IX, X). Contralateral: loss of body pain/temp (spinothalamic tract).
⭐ Wallenberg's syndrome (PICA occlusion) classically spares the corticospinal tract, hence no contralateral hemiplegia is a key distinguishing feature.
Cranial Nerve Lesions - Nerve Wrecks
- CN III (Oculomotor): Eye "down & out", ptosis, mydriasis.
- CN IV (Trochlear): Vertical diplopia (worse looking down/inward), head tilt away from lesion.
- CN VI (Abducens): Horizontal diplopia, failed eye abduction (lateral gaze palsy).
- 📌 Mnemonic (extraocular muscles): $LR_6SO_4R_3$.
- CN VII (Facial) Palsy:
- LMN (e.g., Bell's Palsy): Ipsilateral entire half of face paralyzed.
- UMN: Contralateral lower face paralysis; forehead spared.
- Other Key Lesions:
- CN V: Trigeminal neuralgia (severe, lancinating facial pain).
- CN IX/X: Bulbar signs (dysphagia, dysarthria, absent gag reflex, uvula deviates away from lesion).
- CN XII: Tongue deviates towards side of LMN lesion on protrusion.
- Localizing Value: Patterns of combined CN palsies help pinpoint lesion site (e.g., cavernous sinus, cerebellopontine angle).

⭐ Pupil-sparing CN III palsy often suggests ischemic microvascular damage, whereas pupil involvement (mydriasis) typically indicates a compressive lesion, such as a posterior communicating artery (PCOM) aneurysm, requiring urgent investigation.
Spinal Cord Syndromes - Spinal Shockers
- Brown-Séquard Syndrome (Hemisection):
- Ipsilateral: UMN paralysis, loss of proprioception/vibration below lesion.
- Contralateral: Loss of pain/temperature sensation, 2-3 segments below lesion.
- Anterior Cord Syndrome (ASA Occlusion):
- Bilateral loss: Motor function (corticospinal), pain/temperature (spinothalamic) below lesion.
- Preserved: Proprioception/vibration (dorsal columns).
- Central Cord Syndrome (Hyperextension Injury, common in elderly):
- Motor impairment: Upper limbs > lower limbs (sacral sparing often present).
- Sensory loss variable; often pain/temperature affected at level of lesion (cape-like distribution).
- Posterior Cord Syndrome (e.g., Tabes Dorsalis, Vitamin B12 deficiency):
- Bilateral loss of proprioception, vibration, and discriminative touch below lesion.
- Motor function, pain/temperature preserved.
- Sacral Sparing: Indicates incomplete lesion; peripheral fibers of spinothalamic tract (sacral) are spared. Common in central cord syndrome; good prognostic sign.

⭐ The anterior spinal artery (ASA) supplies the anterior two-thirds of the spinal cord, including the corticospinal and spinothalamic tracts. Occlusion leads to Anterior Cord Syndrome. 📌 Mnemonic: "A" for Anterior, "A" for Artery, "A"ll motor and pain/temp gone (mostly).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Broca's area lesion: expressive aphasia; Wernicke's area lesion: receptive aphasia.
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage: "worst headache of life", often ruptured berry aneurysm.
- Brown-Séquard syndrome: ipsilateral motor/proprioception loss, contralateral pain/temperature loss.
- Parkinson's disease: dopamine depletion in substantia nigra causes TRAP symptoms.
- Horner's syndrome: ptosis, miosis, anhidrosis due to sympathetic chain lesion.
- Bell's palsy (LMN CN VII): ipsilateral facial paralysis; UMN lesion spares forehead.
- Optic chiasm lesion: bitemporal hemianopia.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app