Brissaud-Sicard syndrome
Brissaud-Sicard syndrome is a very rare pontine stroke syndrome that involves the anterolateral and inferior pons.
Clinical presentation
Classically, the syndrome presents as ipsilateral facial cramps and contralateral hemiparesis .
Pathology
It has been postulated that the syndrome is caused by damage to the pons involving the corticospinal tract and the CN VII nucleus or nerve root . It can be caused by a posterior circulation ischemic stroke, as well as other lesions such as neoplasm (e.g. brainstem glioma) .
Radiographic features
Lesions are in the pons with imaging characteristics depending on underlying cause.
History and etymology
The syndrome is named after Édouard Brissaud (1852-1909) and Jean Athanase Sicard (1872-1929), French physicians, who described the syndrome in 1908 in patients with infarcts secondary to neurosyphilis . However, it was first described over fifty years earlier by Adolphe-Marie Gubler (1821-1879), another French physician, in 1856 .