Manifestations of subacute cerebral infarction


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First, the patient may exhibit speech disorders, such as motor aphasia, sensory aphasia, or dysarthria, such as slurred pronunciation; second, in the case of subacute cerebral infarction of the brainstem, patients may exhibit dizziness, nausea, vomiting, or related clinical manifestations such as double vision, dysphagia, or drinking cough; and ataxia of the trunk and limbs. The third point shows that limb paralysis is also a common clinical symptom, usually manifested as hemiplegia, severe patients are completely unable to move one limb, in addition to sensory disorders, manifested as numbness of the limb. If subacute cerebral infarction affects the frontal lobe, temporal lobe, hippocampus, the patient's clinical manifestations will also show cognitive decline.