A 68-year-old patient presents with sudden onset of right-sided weakness and slurred speech. The symptoms completely resolve within 30 minutes with no residual neurological deficits. This clinical presentation is most consistent with:
ATransient Ischemic Attack (TIA)
BSubarachnoid hemorrhage
CIntracerebral hemorrhage
DIschemic stroke
Superior temporal gyrus lesion leads to?
AAnomic aphasia
BBroca's aphasia
CWernicke's aphasia
DNon-fluent aphasia
A patient presented with ipsilateral Horner's syndrome, ipsilateral loss of pain and temperature sensations in the face, vertigo with numbness and loss of sweating and dysarthria on the contralateral side. All these symptoms are caused due to a lesion in:
AA and B
BB and D
CB, C, D
DA, B, C
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