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==Definition== | ==Definition== | ||
The '''anterolateral central arteries''' are a group of small arteries that arise from the M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery shortly after it branches off from the internal carotid artery. | The '''anterolateral central arteries''' are a group of small arteries that arise from the M1 segment of the [[Corpus:Middle cerebral artery|middle cerebral artery]] shortly after it branches off from the internal carotid artery. | ||
''see also:'' central anteromedial arteries | ''see also:'' central anteromedial arteries |
Version vom 19. Juli 2024, 17:05 Uhr

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Synonym: lenticulostriate arteries
Definition
The anterolateral central arteries are a group of small arteries that arise from the M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery shortly after it branches off from the internal carotid artery.
see also: central anteromedial arteries
Neuroanatomy
Classification
The anterolateral central arteries are further subdivided in some sources into:[1]
- Medial group: parts of the anterolateral central arteries that arise from the more proximal areas of the M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery
- Lateral group: parts of the anterolateral central arteries that arise from the more distal areas of the M1 segment of the middle cerebral artery
Supply area
The anterolateral central arteries supply the basal ganglia, including the lentiform nucleus and caudate nucleus, as well as the middle part of the internal capsule and small parts of the thalamus.
Clinic
Occlusion of a single anterolateral central artery leads to a lenticulostriatal infarction. This form of lacunar infarction usually occurs on the basis of lipohyalinosis of the vessels in arterial hypertension.
If several anterolateral central arteries are affected, it is referred to as a striatocapsular infarction.
Source
- ↑ Piccinin et al Anatomy, Head and Neck, Striate Arteries, StatPearls Publishing LLC, 2022