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The artery of Percheron is a rare anatomical variant in which a single dominant perforating artery arises from one P1 segment of the posterior cerebral artery (PCA) and supplies bilateral paramedian thalami with or without involvement of the rostral midbrain.
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- It was first described by French neurologist Gérard Percheron.
- It is a classic stroke syndrome, often underrecognized.
Anatomy & Variants
- Normally, thalamic–midbrain perforators arise bilaterally from both PCAs.
- In the AOP variant, one common trunk supplies both sides.
Four main variants of thalamic–midbrain arterial supply (Percheron classification):
- Type I: Each PCA gives off its own perforators (most common).
- Type IIa: Both thalami supplied by branches from one PCA.
- Type IIb (classic AOP): Single unpaired trunk from one PCA bifurcates to supply both thalami.
- Type III: Arterial arcade between both PCAs provides supply.
Clinical Importance
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Occlusion produces bilateral thalamic infarcts, with hallmark features of altered consciousness, memory dysfunction, and vertical gaze palsy.
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Symptoms:
- Altered consciousness (diencephalic involvement).
- Memory impairment, confusion, hypersomnolence.
- Vertical gaze palsy, oculomotor disturbances.
- Sometimes hemiparesis or cerebellar signs (if midbrain also involved).