Stroke Flashcards

1
Q

Hemorrhagic stroke

A

subarachnoid hemorrhage, intercerebral bleed

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2
Q

Ischemic stroke

A

lacunar, thromboembolic (most common), embolic

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3
Q

CHADS2-VASc Score

A

C - CHF - 1
H - HTN - 1
A - Age > 75 - 2
D - DM - 1
S2 - Prior TIA/stroke - 2
V - Vascular disease - 1
A - Age 65-74 - 1
Sc - Sex (fem) - 1

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4
Q

TIA

A

cerebral ischemic event lasting less than 24 hrs, usually minutes w/ no neurologic deficit

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5
Q

Complete stroke

A

cerebral ischemic acute event w deficit that persists

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6
Q

Hemispheric infarct

A

whole hemisphere - paralysis, can’t speak

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7
Q

Lacunar infarct

A

small stroke (white matter)

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8
Q

Treatable risk factors

A

HTN, hypercholesterolemia, heart disease (A. fib), DM, smoking, excessive alc use, lack of exercise, obesity, carotid bruit

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9
Q

untreatable risk factors

A

age, sex, race, prior stroke, heredity

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10
Q

Stroke patho

A

-Thrombus formation: asymp atherosclerotic plaque, platelet deposition, occlusive thrombus formation, plaque fissure-red thrombus-embolism)
-cardiogenic embolus-blood stasis-thrombus-ejected to brain

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11
Q

Carotid territory (most common presentation)

A

unilateral weakness, unilateral sensory symptoms, aphasia-difficulty understanding speech or speaking, or both, monocular visual loss, and transient global amnesia

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12
Q

Vertebrobasilar territory presentation

A

-bilateral weakness, sensory, &/or visual complaints
-diplopia, vertigo, ataxia w/o weakness, dysphagia (diff swallowing)

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13
Q

Phases of stroke

A

-Primary prevention (mod. risk factors/non mod. risk factors)
-Acute management
-secondary prevention

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14
Q

Types of stokes prevented by anti platelet therapy

A

-small vessel lacunar
-large vessel embolic
-large vessel thrombotic

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15
Q

types of strokes prevented by warfarin

A

Cardioembolic

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16
Q

Ticlopidine/Plavix/Prasugrel MOA

A

block ADP receptors

17
Q

ASA MOA

A

inhibits cyclooxygenase and thromboxane to inhibit platelet aggregation and activation

18
Q

Dipyridamole MOA

A

inc plasma adenosine and inhibits platelet phosphodiesterase

19
Q

Secondary stroke prophylaxis

A

anti platelet drugs (ASA, ticlopidine, plavix, prasugrel, ticagrelor, ASA/ER Diprydamole

20
Q

Prasugrel and Ticagrelor

A

FDA approved for CAD
-use when ASA and Plavix or Aggrenox don’t work

21
Q

ASA

A

-avoid if they have an allergy or bleeding risk
-if pt needs rapid effect 81 mg doesn’t get to full effect until 7-10 days so use 325 and then taper down to 81

22
Q

Plavix

A

don’t use if they are on CCB

23
Q

Aggrenox

A

Causes HA and GI effects

24
Q

ASA + Plavix

A

inc risk of bleeding

25
Q

Dual anti platelet therapy

A

-coronary artery stents and new cerebral ischemia
-cerebral ischemia within 90 days
-A. fib not able to take warfarin

26
Q

ASA resistance

A

-compliance: urinary salicylates
-NSAIDs other than Celebrex comprise ASA
-EC to chewable or alka seltzer
-change dose where appropriate

27
Q

Plavix resistance

A

-minimize 3A4 & 2C19 drugs (inhib)
-CCB to ACE & PPI to H2
-Add med that induces CYP

28
Q

Common meds that influence Plavix metabolism

A

-Statins other than rosuvastatin
-change CCB to ACE as long as its not for rate control
-Ambien, eszopiclone (zaleplon less likely)
-Gliburide, not glypizide or metformin
-Enablex, Ditropan, not Detrol or Sanctura
-PPIs

29
Q

Patient resistant to ASA and Plavix

A

-Ticagrelor (not FDA approved)
-max ASA dose 100 mg daily w/ Ticagrelor
-Prasugrel (pro drug dependent on 3A4)