Clinical Stroke- Syndromes And Management Flashcards

1
Q

What is a stroke

A

Sudden onset, focal dysfunction

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2
Q

What are the classification of stroke

A

Cerebral infarct
Intracerebral haemmorhage
Subarachnoid haemorrhage

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3
Q

How does a cerebral infarct happen

A
  1. When you get an infarct you block off a blood vessel
  2. Blood flow drops
  3. Blood flow less than 10ml/min/100g causes cytotoxic cell death and apoptosis which is irreversible
  4. Area in the brain dies off (called the core)
  5. Blood can flow in the area of the blocked vessel by collateral flow which can provide some perfusion
  6. If blood flow drops to 20-10ml/min/100g you get a penumbra which is when cells are not dead straight away but there is an electrical failure in potential reversible state
  7. If its in penumbra for a long time it can die off
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4
Q

What are the mechanism for an cerebral infarct

A
  1. Large artery disease
  2. Cardioembolic stroke
  3. Small artery disease
  4. Cyrptogenic stroke
  5. Other causes of stroke: carotid dissection, vasculits, endocarditis
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5
Q

What is large artery disease

A

This is when there is buildup of cholesterol plaque in large arteries, the plaque can rupture to occlude the vessel

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6
Q

What is a carotid dissection

A

You get trauma to the blood vessel and a haematoma within the wall, the haematoma can occlude the vessel or rupture into the vessela nd embolise distally

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7
Q

What are the carotid dissection symptoms

A

Horners syndrome: ptosis, meiosis, anhydrosis
Unilateral pain in face, head and neck
Anterioir ciruclation stroke syndrome

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8
Q

Why does horners syndrome occur in carotid dissection

A

Due to sympathetic supply of the eye travelling up the carotif which can become damaged when you have a haematoma

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9
Q

What is a cardioembolic stroke

A

When the blood clots form in the heart and then embolise to the brain. Can be caused by atrial fibirllation (poorly coordinated contraction causes formation of clots in the heart and can embolise to the brain)

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10
Q

What is small artery disease/lacunar stroke

A

When you get atherosclerosis in small arteries that involve the deep white matter and the brain stem.
Atherosclerosis occurs due to hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia

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11
Q

What are the types of intracerebral haemorrhage

A

Primary

Secondary

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12
Q

What is primary intracerebral haemorrhage

A

Due to hypertension and amyloid angiopathy

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13
Q

What is secondary intra cerebral haemorrhage

A

Deu to a physical problem e,g tumour, impaired coagulation due to warfarin

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14
Q

What is a subarachnoid haemorrhage

A

Bleeding in the subarachnoid space that will come from berry aneurysm

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15
Q

What is a extradural haemmorhage

A

Usually a bleed from the middle meningeal artery when you get hit on the side of the head

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16
Q

What is the arterial supply of the brain by

A

2 internal carotid artery that come off from the common carotid artery
2 vertebral arteries

17
Q

What does the 2 internal carotid artery and 2 vertebral artery connect to form

A

The circle of willis

18
Q

What does the 2 vertebral arteries join together to form

A

The basilar artery

19
Q

What does the internal carotif artery become

A

Middle cerebral artery

Anterioir cerebral artery

20
Q

What area does the internal carotid artery supply

A

Anterioir brain

21
Q

What area does the vertebrobasillar artery supply

A

Brainstem and cerebellum

22
Q

What can stroke syndromes be seperated into

A

Anterioir circulation stroke- from carotid artery supply
Posterior circualtion stroke- from vertebrobascilar circulation
Lacunar stroke- small vessel disease that can be in anterior or posterir circulation

23
Q

What are the causes of anterior circulartion stroke

A

Thrombotic occulisin- cardioembolic

Intracerebral haemmorhage secondary to vascular malformation and tumour

24
Q

What are the signs in anterior circulation stroke

A
  1. Contralateral UMN hemiparesis or hemisensory loss e.g upgoing plantars in one feet and other feet normal
  2. High mental function problem e.g stuttering speech (expressive) or receptive i.e speaking garbage- this is if in dominant left cortex or if non dominant right cortex (difficulty performing a difficult task when motor is ok) e.g not knowing how to dress
  3. Hemianopia- due to visual pathway affected
25
Q

What are the types of anterior circulation stroke

A

Partial- if 2/3

Total 3/3 or feature 2 on its own

26
Q

What is lacunar syndrome

A

This can be anterior or posterior:
It can be:
Infarcts in pons and basal ganglia
Deep subcortical haemorrhage

27
Q

What are the features of lacunar syndrome

A

Contralateral UMN hemiplegia
Contralateral hemisensory loss
Contralateral upgoing plantar
No cortical problem e.g higher cortical problem

28
Q

What is posterior circulation syndrome due to

A

Vertebrobasillar occlusion- large vessel disease and cardiembolic
Or
Brainstem haemorrhage

29
Q

What are the features of posterior circulation syndrome

A
Dizziness
Vertigo
Diplopia
Dysphagia
Ataxia
Cranial nerve palsies
Uni/bilateral weakness
30
Q

What is a transient ischaemic attack

A

The person has a stroke that lasts less than 24 hours

31
Q

What are the causes of TIA

A

Ishcaemia due to large vessel disease, small vessel disease or cardioembolic