Anterior cerebral artery (ACA) infarct

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At the time the article was created Henry Knipe had no recorded disclosures.

Last revised: 15 Apr 2023, Craig Hacking ◉ Disclosures:

At the time the article was last revised Craig Hacking had the following disclosures:

These were assessed during peer review and were determined to not be relevant to the changes that were made.

Revisions: 14 times, by 9 contributors - see full revision history and disclosures Systems: Synonyms:

Anterior cerebral artery (ACA) territory infarcts are much less common than either middle or posterior cerebral artery territory infarcts.

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Epidemiology

ACA territory infarcts are rare, comprising ~2% of ischemic strokes 1,2 .

Clinical presentation

ACA stroke syndrome presents as 1-3 :

Pathology

ACA territory infarcts are less common because if the A1 segment is occluded there is generally enough collateral flow via the contralateral A1 segment to supply the distal ACA territory 2 .

Embolic strokes (often with MCA involvement) are the most common cause 3 . Rarely, they are also seen as a complication of severe midline shift, where the ACA is occluded by mass effect or severe vasospasm.

Radiographic features

The features are those of cerebral infarction in the anterior cerebral artery vascular territory:

Differential diagnosis