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Brain Embolism, Revisited
Neurol 43:1281-1287, Caplan,L., 1993
See this aricle in Pubmed

Article Abstract
Treatment of brain embolism should depend on the nature of the embolic material,if discoverable or predictable,not on whether the source was cardiac or intra-arterial.The middle cerebral artery territory is the most common recipient site for emboli,but many emboli do go to the carotid arteries and the posterior circulation.Cardiac and intra-arterial embolism probably each account for about one in five posterior circulation infarcts.Paradoxical embolism is much more common than formerly appreciated.The carotid arteries are probably the most common sources of intra-arterial emboli to the brain,but emboli also frequently arise from the aorta and the vertebral arteries.Potential embolic materials probably frequently enter the circulation but rarely cause strokes.
 
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aortic arch ulcerated plaques
cerebral embolism
embolism
embolism,paradoxical
embolism,source of
middle cerebral artery,emboli to
posterior cerebral artery embolism
posterior cerebral artery territory infarction
review article
treatment of neurologic disorder

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