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What is a stroke?
a focal neurologic deficit resulting in cerebral vascular disease (CVA)
Stats
5th leading cause of death
prevalence goes up with age (both men and woman)
it is highest in black males (due to inequalities in healthcare)
preventable and treatable
Types of Stroke
ischemic (blockage of blood flow) and hemorrhagic (brain bleeds either intracerebral or subarachnoid)
Ischemic Stroke
Thrombus: a build up of clots in the blood stream
Embolus: a piece of thrombus breaking off and getting trapped in the blood stream
Hemorrhagic Stroke
This is where a blood vessel bursts leading to a brain bleed. Intracerebral: Subarachnoid
Mortality Rates
Ischemic: 8-12%
Hemorrhagic: 37-38%
Hemorrhagic Risk Factors
Hypertension
Low cholesterol and LDL
lower triglycerides
increasing age
Ischemic Risk Factors
hypertension
high cholesterol
obesity
drug abuse
alcohol abuse
diabetes
smoking
lack of exercise
irregular heart rhythm
Stroke F.A.S.T
F: facial drop
A: arm weakness
S: slurred speech
T: time is critical
Acute Stroke Examination
Data: CT Scan, vital signs, blood glucose level
brief patient history: PMH, meds, recent surgeries and trauma
National Insitute of Health Stroke Scale
Last known normal
ABC workup: artery, blood, cardiac
Head CT
is blood present?
Signs of stroke (either 24 hours or 3-6 hours)
early infarct signs
What would you see on a CT Scan
Hemorrhagic: blood
Ischemic: there will be no distinct between grey matter or white matter
What is the purpose of thrombolytics (tPA) in ischemic stroke management?
To decrease clotting
- tissue plasminogen activator
- used within 4.5 hours of symptom onset
- shown to improve functional outcomes
What is intra-arterial thrombectomy used for in ischemic stroke management?
- manual removal of arterial blockage
- 666 rule
less than 6 hours onset
NIHSS: greater than 6
ASPECTS greater than 6 (aka last normal)
Other factors of ischemic stroke management
- maintain/increase cerebral perfusion
-stabilize metabolic demands
-evaluate stroke etiology
Hemorrhagic Stroke Presentation (48-72 hours)
headache, nausea, vomiting, seizures, focal neurologic deficits, herniation syndromes (aka confusion)
Acute ICH management (hemorrhagic)
- blood pressure control
reverse
- coagulopathy (more clotting)
-intracranial pressure management
-surgical management
What is the surgical management of Ischemic CVA
posterior fossa decompression (removal of bone in order to relive inflammation)
What is stroke prognosis?
hemorrhagic stroke has higher morbidity and mortality
30-50% mortality
20% independent at 6 months post
What factors impact the neurological findings of ischemic stroke?
Size, location of lesion, and amount of collateral blood flow
What type of deficits are associated with the carotid vascular system in ischemic stroke?
Unilateral deficits
What type of deficits are associated with the vascular supply to the basilar system in ischemic stroke?
Bilateral deficits
Acute Stroke Symptoms
weakness, numbness, aphasia (memory around speech around brain), dysarthria (slurred speech around mouth), confusion, altered vision, gait/balance impaired, ataxia (disordered movement). vertigo, dysphagia (cannot chew), headache
Middle Cerebral Artery
If it is on one side (for example left) then there is weakness on the other side (right)
-hemiparesis
-sensory loss
- aphasia (L), neglect (r)
- visual field cut
- gaze preference (if L issue, L gp)
Anterior Cerebral Artery
- contralateral weakness
- contralateral sensory loss
- abulia (can't decide) (left)
- gaze preference
- incontinence
Central Posterior Cerebral Artery Syndrome
- visual field cut
- thalamic involvement
- weakness
- sensory changes (anesthesia, thalamic pain syndrome)
- hemiballismus
Peripheral Posterior Cerebral Artery Syndrome
- amnesia (hippocampus involvement)
- alexia (inability to read) without agraphia (inability to write)
- visual deficits (cortical blindness, visual field cuts)
Basilar Artery Syndrome
- supplies pons, midbrain, cerebellum,etc.
- altered mental status
- brainstem findings (weakness, cranial nerve deficits)
Damage to Pons with BAS
- tetraplegia
- coma
- locked-in syndrome (you know what is going on, but cannot move)
Stroke of the Cerebellum
nystagmus (eyeballs moving)
dizziness
nausea/vomiting
ipsilateral ataxia (disordered movement on the same side)
Hemorrhagic Stroke locations & depths
- intracerebral: basal ganglia/thalamus
- subarachnoid: cerebral white matter
- subdural: brainstem
- epidural: cerebellum
Intracerebral Hemorrhage
- bleeding from an arterial source into the brain parenchyma (most fatal)
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH)
- Bleeding into the subarachnoid space between the arachnoid and the pia mater
Most common non-traumatic causes of SAH
Aneurysms and vascular malformations
What happens with SAH
berry aneurysm where an rise in BP creates a strain which results in this bump that bursts (physical strain can be an orgasm and valsalve)
What are the most common sites of SAH
1) anterior communicating artery
2) posterior communicating artery
3) middle cerebral artery
Dangers of SAH?
- spewing blood, under high pressure, into brain tissue
- susceptibility to re-rupture
- obstruction of the SA space which can lead to hydrocephalus due to CSF blockage
Hemorrhagic CVA syndromes: Putaminal Hemorrhage
greater alteration of consciousness
Hemorrhagic CVA syndromes: Thalamic Hemorrhage
Results in contralateral hemiplegia with disproportionately greater sensory loss
Hemorrhagic CVA syndromes: Cerebellar Hemorrhage
ataxia (poor muscle control and coordination), and vestibulopathy (motion sickness)
Hemorrhagic CVA syndromes: Pontine Hemorrhage
Offers the poorest prognosis
Tetraplegia (motor and sensory loss in spinal cord) and coma
Lacunar CVA syndromes
• Pure motor • Pure sensory • Ataxic hemiparesis • Clumsy hand dysarthria • Mixed sensory and motor
Other common signs/symptoms
fatigue
cognitive dysfunction
depression
anxiety
PTSD
Recovery inital improvements
- Reduction of cerebral edema
- Absorption of damaged tissue
- Improved local vascular flow
- Damaged areas of the brain are circumvented (brain's plasticity)
Recovery
3-6 months (but also can take months to years)
- the beginning weeks show the most improvement
- chronically it can either get a little bit better plateau, or decline
Stroke Outcomes
- rehab is effective
- age does not factor in outcome
- good chance for functional recovery