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Blood is supplied by branches from the superior cerebellar artery.
The third portion of the superior cerebellar arteries.
A cerebellar artery is an artery that provides blood to the cerebellum.
It can be caused by an interruption to the blood supply of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery.
Perforating branches of the posterior cerebral and superior cerebellar arteries.
The arterial supply of these plexus is from posterior inferior cerebellar artery.
Preserved simple and impaired compound movement after infarction in the territory of the superior cerebellar artery.
The superior cerebellar artery.
Inferior cerebellar arteries can refer to:
The third (III) cranial nerve, which passes between the posterior cerebral and superior cerebellar arteries.
The plexus on the vertebral artery is continued on to the basilar, posterior cerebral, and cerebellar arteries.
It has been suggested that this compression may be related to an aberrant branch of the superior cerebellar artery that lies on the trigeminal nerve.
The posterior spinal artery can often originate from the posterior inferior cerebellar artery, rather than the vertebral.
The superior cerebellar artery (SCA) arises near the termination of the basilar artery.
The vertebral artery and the origin of the posteroinferior cerebellar artery (PICA).
A stroke that cuts off the blood supply to this area (e.g., a clot in the posterior inferior cerebellar artery) destroys both tracts simultaneously.
Superior cerebellar artery (SCA)
Posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA)
Anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA)
The anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) is an artery in the brain that supplies part of the cerebellum.
Pattern 1: Many vessels, including anterior cerebral arteries, thalamic perforating arteries, and superior cerebellar arteries discharge into the vein of Galen.
Lacunes are caused by occlusion of a single deep penetrating artery that arises directly from the constituents of the Circle of Willis, cerebellar arteries, and basilar artery.
Occlusion of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery or one of its branches, or of the vertebral artery leads to Wallenberg syndrome, also called lateral medullary syndrome.
Lateral medullary syndrome, also known as Wallenberg's Syndrome, is caused by blockage of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) or the vertebral arteries.
The principal vascular structures coursing along the middle incisural space are the posterior cerebral artery and the superior cerebellar artery which pass around the brainstem, parallel to the free tentorial edge.