1. Lacunes: small deep cerebral infarcts;Fisher, C.M.;Neurology; tion the occurrence of non vascular aetiologies,1965
2. Capsular infarcts. The underlying vascular lesions. Lacunar syndromes due to intracerebral haemorrhage may be less rare than expected, since Mori et afi' observed them in 19 out of 174 consecutive patients;Fisher, C.M.;Arch Neurol,1979
3. Pure motor hemiplegia of vascular origin;Fisher, C.M.; Curry, H.B.;Arch Neurol,1965
4. Homolateral ataxia and crural paresis: a vascular syndrome;Fisher, C.M.; Cole, M.;J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry,1965
5. A lacunar stroke: The dysarthria-clumsy hand tifying cases with cerebral haemorrhage is stressed by syndrome;Fisher, C.M.;Neurology; strokes are commonly benign, leaving only mild to moderate disability; consequently, these patients are often potential candidates,1967