This patient suffered
an infarction of the medial aspect of the right occipital
lobe. The patient realized that he could not see to his left, and
purposefully did not neglect objects even if they were in his blind
regions.
By contrast, patients with a larger lesion in the lateral
aspect of the right occipital lobe involving neighboring
parts of the right parietal and temporal lobes may neglect objects
on the left because they have lost the 'concept' of the left side,
whether of themselves and of their world.
The central (macular) visual fields are usually represented in far
posterior occipital lobe cortex that lies in the MCA/PCA border
zone. Central vision is therefore largely spared in most PCA infarcts
because there is enough blood flowing in MCA cortical branches to
supply the border zone cortex.. Unfortunately, that was not the
case for this patient, and there was no macular sparing. The patient's
pupillary light reflexes were normal, however, because neither the
retina, the optic tract or the upper brainstem depend on the cortical
branches of the PCA.
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