. Medical diagnosis for the student and practitioner. . Fig. 606.—Showing relative position ofmotor and sensory fibers in the internalcapsule. [{After Monakow.) Fig. 607.—Topography of motortract in internal capsule. Lesions of the corpora quadrigernina are characterized by flaccid nuclearor tract oculo-motor paralysis, third and fourth nerves, stumbling gait, andataxia {cerebellar type).* Lesions of the Lower Pons.—The picture is usually characteristic, theordinary type of paralysis being a crossed spastic hemiplegia, with paralysis * The region is rich in nuclei and lesions may be


. Medical diagnosis for the student and practitioner. . Fig. 606.—Showing relative position ofmotor and sensory fibers in the internalcapsule. [{After Monakow.) Fig. 607.—Topography of motortract in internal capsule. Lesions of the corpora quadrigernina are characterized by flaccid nuclearor tract oculo-motor paralysis, third and fourth nerves, stumbling gait, andataxia {cerebellar type).* Lesions of the Lower Pons.—The picture is usually characteristic, theordinary type of paralysis being a crossed spastic hemiplegia, with paralysis * The region is rich in nuclei and lesions may be unilateral or bilateral and involve thetegmentum (incomplete hemianesthesia), the optic tract or lateral geniculate body (hemi-anopsia), the crusta (paralysis of opposite leg and arm or even hypoglossal and facial hemi-plegia) or produce defective hearing through involvement of the median geniculate body(Jakob). SEGMENTAL LESIONS 1213 of the facial and trigeminus on the side of the lesion, , paralysis of themuscles of mastication, anesthesia of trigem


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectdiagnos, bookyear1922