Introduction: Acute pseudobulbar palsy produced by bilateral cerebral infarctions is a rare syndrome, which includes among its symptoms mutism, severe dysphagia and diverse sensory-motor signs.
Clinical cases: We report two middle-aged patients who suddenly developed a severe dysarthria and dysphagia, which impeded their ability to speak and to feed themselves, with spasmodic laughing and crying and slight motor deficit ('pure' pseudobulbar palsy). The acute lesions, using conventional and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, corresponded partially to the anterior choroidal artery (case 1: acute lesion in the left periventricular white matter and a subacute one in the right semioval centrum; case 2: acute lesions in the right frontal subcortical white matter and in the periventricular white matter adjacent to the left lateral ventricle). The favorable evolution of these patients in contrast to previously described patients with acute pseudobulbar palsy could indicate that the motor deficit is a prognostic factor for this syndrome.
Conclusions: Diffusion-Weighted magnetic resonance imaging permits differentiation with high precision of the acute lesions in patients who present old ones. Sometimes multiple acute lacunar infarctions (MALI) are found to be responsible of the syndrome. Hypertension and diabetes are the risk factors for the small vessel disease underlying these MALI.