I feel like diagnosis of watershed infarcts is not well taught. My mother spend almost four months dying of the least common watershed infarcts, with accompanying older (previously undiagnosed) strokes. It took three and a half months for anyone to understand or explain why she first improved after the coma, and then rapidly began declining until she suddenly died. She was 58. It was the most horrific thing to watch. We celebrated a miracle that she was alive and "unharmed with a tiny bleed in the left ventricle" to three weeks in a coma, awake and talking and walking and full motor dexterity, to decline and death by aspiration on her own spit. Nightmare. These can be such nightmares.
I feel like diagnosis of watershed infarcts is not well taught. My mother spend almost four months dying of the least common watershed infarcts, with accompanying older (previously undiagnosed) strokes. It took three and a half months for anyone to understand or explain why she first improved after the coma, and then rapidly began declining until she suddenly died. She was 58. It was the most horrific thing to watch. We celebrated a miracle that she was alive and "unharmed with a tiny bleed in the left ventricle" to three weeks in a coma, awake and talking and walking and full motor dexterity, to decline and death by aspiration on her own spit.
Nightmare. These can be such nightmares.
Explained in much easy way.
very well presented lecture!!!
Hi Dr Jithin, Will you consider anticoagulation for isolated cortical watershed infarct with normal Angio ??
Nice presentation sir
Nice presentation...but you are breathing heavily in between