haemorrhagic stroke Flashcards

1
Q

describe the falx cerebri

A

major dura fold
dura mater between longitudinal fissuer
divides left + right hemisphers

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2
Q

describe tentoruim cerebelli

A

forms tent partition between cerebrum + cerebellum

above tentorium space, below infratentorial space

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3
Q

describe the dura mater

A

periosteal layer adheres to skull
meningeal layer adheres to aracnoid mater
loosely covers brain
subdural space

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4
Q

describe arachnoid mater

A

csf reabsoprtion
finger projections penetrate meningeal layer of dura
subarachnoid space = contains CSF

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5
Q

describe pia mater

A

closely adheres to surface of brain

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6
Q

name the common and non-spontaneous causes of intracerebral haemorrhage

A
common = long-standing hypetension
non-spontaneous = TBI
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7
Q

describe the role of cerebral amyloid angiopathy in ICH

A

amyloid deposition on wallsof cerebral arteries

weakens wealls = haemorrhage

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8
Q

what type od rupture in iCH and where does bleed

A

arterioles
deep, non-corticol structures
bleed in periphery of cerebral hemi = better outcome

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9
Q

how do charcot-bouchard aneurysms occur and where

A

chronic hypertension => deposition lipid-hyaline substances in arteriole wall => weaken
minute aneurysms
deep brain where vessel diameter <300nm

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10
Q

what are the clinical features of ICH

A
normal stroke symptoms +
severe headache 
vomiting 
rapid loss consciousness 
seizures
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11
Q

outcomes of ICH

A

death 24-48 = common
survivors = motor cognitive deficits
management BP -> effect on cerebral ischaemia

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12
Q

What is subarachnoic haemarrohage and why does it occur

A

blood in subarachnoid space => bloody CSF

commonly occur from berry aneurysms

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13
Q

what are the biggest risk factors for SAH and what can is result from

A
  • smoking hypertension, alcohol, genetics
  • from vascular malformations, trauma, rupture of ICH into ventricular system, malignant hypetension,
    acute = shitting, orgasm
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14
Q

what are berry aneurysms, where do they occur and what are their cause

A

small
branch at circle of willis
developmental defects in elastic lamina/acquired defects in artery
cause = infection, immunolgical, inflam, atherosclerotic, vascular
hypertension exacerbates defecit
rupture => SAH, or ICH

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15
Q

what are the clinical features and outcomes of SAH

A
severe, sudden headache
nausea, vomitingstiff neck (meningeal irritation)
photophobia
blurred/double vision 
loss consciousness/seizures

oucomess = 30-50% mortality
imapcted by haemorrhage severirt, sex, age, treatment, comorbidities

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16
Q

3 treatments for berry aneurysms

A

clip = blood cant pass through aneurysm
endovascular coiling = packed platinum coils via catheter = prevents passage blood => aneurysm
artery bypass = aneurysm blocked = blood diverted to new artery

17
Q

what are the complications of ICH or SAH

A

acute/chronic hydrocephalus
cerebral oedema
blood pool effects = iscaemia + infarction of adjacent structures, increased ICP, dec CPP, herniation syndromes, compression resp centres of brain stem

18
Q

what is a peri-haematomal oedema

A
complication of ICH
swelling around haematoma (clot)
worsens neuro outcomes 
expands quick 
treated by reduce cerebral oedema
19
Q

describe hydrocephalus

A

complication stroke
abnormal inc in V of CSF in skill
30% SAH
treatment = extraventricular drain

20
Q

describe vasospasm as a complication

its effects and treatments

A

decrease calibre of cerebral artery
effect of clotted blood and breakdown within brain
vasospasm => prog cerebral iscahemia/stroke -> cerebral oedema -> death
treatment = ca2+ blocker => prevent ichaemic injury, cause hypotension (need manage), volume expansions

21
Q

how can we use tpa for ICH treatment

A

wait for bleed to stabilise
minimally invasive procedure
administer tpa through catheter directly into haematoma to dissolve over 3 days