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Isolated Monoparesis Following Stroke
JNNP 76:805-807, Paciaroni,M.,et al, 2005
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
51 of 2003 patients (2.5%) had isolated monoparesis, and of these 39 (76.5%) were ischaemic strokes and 12 (23.5%) were haemorrhagic. Cardioembolism was the cause of stroke in 15.7%, atherosclerosis in 9.8%, and small artery disease in 39.2%. Most of the haemorrhages were in the thalamic-capsular region (5/12). Most of the ischaemic lesions were in the deep territory of the middle cerebral artery, the corona radiate, or the centrum semiovale (20/39); 16 of 39 were in the cortical territories or the watershed region. Isolated monoparesis is a rare symptom in stroke patients and is often caused by small artery disease or a small haemorrhage.
 
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arm weakness
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cerebrovascular accident,etiology
cerebrovascular accident,location of
cerebrovascular accident,vascular territory involved
cortical infarction
intracerebral hemorrhage
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leg weakness,unilateral
monoparesis
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review article
risk factors
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