Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2023
In the middle of the nineteenth century, small holes in deep regions in the brain were recognized as widened perivascular spaces (Durand-Fardel: ‘état criblé’). Later researchers (Laborde, Proust, Campbell) reported in these areas some larger cavities with ragged borders, presumably damaged brain tissue (‘lacunes’); these authors did not correlate such lesions with symptoms, and their pathogenesis remained unclear.
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