Middle/Anterior Cerebral Watershed Infarction - Case 3

A 78 year-old man presented with numerous, recurrent spells of transient loss of vision in the right eye. Otherwise, his neurological examination was normal.


Show the Internal Carotid Stenosis           Show the External Carotid "String String"            Outline the Infarction

Watershed Infarction: (Left) Right Carotid Angiogram; (Right) Diffusion-weighted axial MRI. On the angiogram, note the high grade internal carotid artery stenosis. In addition, the external carotid artery is tightly occluded, displaying a "string sign". On the MRI diffusion images, there are several small infarcts, which were clinically silent. These are all in the watershed distribution between the middle cerebral artery (MCA) and anterior cerebral artery (ACA).

The area between two vascular territories is known as a watershed. Watershed infarcts typically occur following reduced perfusion pressure, often secondary to cardiac events or severe bleeding. In those cases, they are usually bilateral. When a watershed infarct is seen unilaterally, this is usually due to hemodynamic narrowing of a proximal artery (in this case, the carotid artery) without intact collateral vessels (e.g., an incomplete circle of Willis), with or without superimposed hypotension. Most commonly, these involve the distal territory of the carotid artery. Thus, if a patient has severe, hemodynamically significant carotid stenosis, then ischemia first occurs between the terminal territories of the middle and anterior cerebral arteries on that side.

The watershed territory between the MCA and ACA corresponds to the shoulder and hip girdle muscles on the motor homunculus, leading to a characteristic clinical deficit, weakness of the shoulder and hip girdle muscles bilaterally (often referred to as "the man in the barrel" distribution of weakness). There is also a watershed territory between the MCA and PCA. When an infarct occurs in this territory, patients typically develop bilateral cortical visual abnormalities, among them cortical blindness, Anton's syndrome (cortical blindness with denial/confabulation) and Balint's syndrome (asimultagnosia, optic ataxia, and gaze apraxia). Lastly, a watershed area exists between deep and superior cortical vessels. Most often, this is in the basal ganglia / internal capsule areas which are supplied by the lenticulostriates below and the cortical branches above.


Revised 11/29/06
Copyrighted 2006. David C Preston