Infarcts in the middle cerebral artery territory

Abstract
Correlates of the size of infarcts, the time from stroke to death, and the mechanisms of death were studied in 77 consecutive patients who died from infarction in the middle cerebral artery territory. The area of infarcts was assessed by planimetry on schemas of representative brain levels and the results were expressed as a ratio of infarcted area on the whole MCA territory. No clear relationship was found between the size of infarcts in the MCA territory, and any of the characteristics of the patients, but extensive infarcts were more frequent when the internal carotid artery was occluded. No evidence was found of an adverse effect of age, diabetes or initial hyperglycemia on the size of infarcts. The mechanisms of death were not linked to sex, age, high blood pressure, diabetes, blood glucose level at admission, presence and location of an arterial occlusion, or etiology of the infarct. On the contrary, they varied as a function of interval from stroke to death. Transtentorial herniation, the main cerebral cause of death, occurred mainly in the first week and was related to the large size of infarcts. Rare recurrences of stroke and frequent extracerebral mechanisms of death (mainly pneumonia, pulmonary embolism and cardiopathy) occurred later on.