Rousseaux M
36 Papers
185 Citations
Rousseaux M is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Recall & Infarction. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 36 publications.
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Papers
Analysis of the Perception of and Reactivity to Pain and Heat in Patients With Wallenberg Syndrome and Severe Spinothalamic Tract Dysfunction
TL;DR: This is the first description of the appearance of pain perception of high temperatures in patients with severespinothalamic injury who are suffering from a complete loss of temperature perception, and implies that noxious thermal stimulation can still be perceived via extra spinothalamic pathways (which are slow and multisynaptic), such as the spinoreticulothalamic tract.
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•Journal Article
Residual deficit of verbal recall after a left internal cerebral vein infarct
TL;DR: This case showed that internal cerebral vein thrombosis can have severe consequences on cognition and memory, and that late prognosis is not as fair as has been previously reported in selected patients, and left diencephalic structures are specifically associated with recollection of verbal information from long-term memory.
18
•Journal Article
Postoperative aneurysm of the superficial temporal artery
TL;DR: An aneurysm of the superficial artery, developing after surgical removal of a frontal meningioma, mainly developed on the intracranial internal carotid artery or her branches is described.
15
•Journal Article
Infarctus cérébelleux pseudo-tumoral d'origine veineuse
TL;DR: The case of venous thrombosis with pseudo-tumoral cerebellar infarction with Cerebello-vestibular symptoms and intracranial hypertension, together with a published one, shows that a venousThromBosis may determine a cerebellary infarct.
14
•Journal Article
Ocular and head movements in infarctions of the thalamic region
TL;DR: Clinical examination and electro-oculography showed that paramedian thalamo-subthalamic lesions were responsible for clear deficits: upGaze paralysis and in some cases downgaze paralysis, partial paresis of the oculomotor nerve, deficits of lateral eye movements, myosis, paralysis of head flexion combined with downgazes paralysis.
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