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Distal subclavian artery occlusion causing multiple cerebral infarcts consequence of retrograde flow of a thrombus?
[thoracic outlet syndrome]
Intracranial
embolization
usually
arises
from
the
heart
,
a
vertebrobasilar
artery
,
a
carotid
artery
,
or
the
aorta
,
but
rarely
from
the
distal
subclavian
artery
upstream
of
an
embolus
.
We
report
on
a
patient
who
experienced
left
shoulder
and
forearm
pain
with
weak
blood
pressure
and
pulse
followed
by
concurrent
onset
of
left
hemiplegia
.
This
case
is
a
rare
example
of
multiple
cerebral
embolic
infarctions
,
which
developed
as
a
complication
of
distal
subclavian
artery
thrombosis
possibly
associated
with
protein
S
deficiency
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"forearm pain with weak blood pressure and pulse followed by concurrent onset of left hemiplegia"
symptom
thoracic outlet syndrome
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