Stroke Flashcards

1
Q

Definition

A

Sudden onset neurological deficits of vascular basis with infarction of CNS tissue

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2
Q

Pathophysiology of ischemic stroke

A
  1. Arterial thrombosis
    a. Large vessel->occlusion, stenosis of carotid, vertebral, IC arteries->insufficient flow beyond lesion->atherosclerosis, vasculitis, dissection
    b. Small vessel->chronic HTN and diabetes= wall thickening and -ve luminal diameter->small penetrating= basal ganglia, internal capsule and thalamus
  2. Cardioembolic->AF, RHD, prosthetic heart, recent MI, endocarditis
  3. Systemic hypoperfusion= global cerebral ischemia->affects watershed zones
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3
Q

Pathophysiology of hemorrhagic

A
  1. Intracerebral hemorrhage
    a. HTN most commonly->rupture of small microaneurysms (Charcot Bouchard) in putamen, thalamus, cerebellum, pons
    b. Trauma
    c. Amyloid angiopathy
    d. Vascular malformation
    e. Vasculitis
    f. Drug use->cocaine
  2. SAH
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4
Q

What is hypertensive encephalopathy

A
Acute severe HTN (typically dBP >130
or sBP >200) can cause hypertensive
encephalopathy – abnormal fundoscopic
exam (papilledema, hemorrhages,
exudates, cotton-wool spots), focal
neurologic symptoms, nausea, vomiting,
visual disturbances and change in LOC.
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5
Q

Stroke syndrome with ACA

A

Contralateral leg paresis and sensory loss

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6
Q

Stroke syndrome with MCA

A
  1. Contralateral weak/sensory loss of face and arm
  2. Cortical sensory loss
  3. CL homonymous hemianopia or quadrantonopia
  4. If left: aphasia
  5. If right: neglect
  6. Eye deviation to the side of the lesion and away from the weak side
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7
Q

Stroke syndrome with PCA

A
  1. CL homonymous hemianopia or quadrantonopia
  2. Midbrain findings: CN 3/4 palsy, pupillary changes, hemiparesis
  3. Thalamic findings: sensory loss, amnesia, -ve LOC
  4. If bilateral->cortical blindness or prosopagnosia
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8
Q

Stroke syndrome with basilar

A

“Locked in”

  1. Quadriparesis
  2. Dysarthria
  3. Impaired eye movement
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9
Q

Stroke syndrome with PICA

A

Lateral medullary/Wallenburg

  1. Ipsilateral ataxia
  2. Ipsilateral horners
  3. Ipsilateral facial sensory loss
  4. CL limb impaired pain/temperature
  5. Nystagmus
  6. Vertigo
  7. NV
  8. Dysphagia
  9. Dysarthria
  10. Hiccups
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10
Q

Stroke syndrome with anterior spinal artery

A

Medial medullary

  1. CL hemiparesis
  2. CL propioC and vibration
  3. IL tongue weakness
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11
Q

Lacunar infarcts

A

Deep hemispheric white matter

  1. Pure motor hemiparesis->posterior limb of Internal capsule, CL arm, face, leg
  2. Pure sensory
  3. Ataxic hemiparesis: IL ataxia, leg paresis
  4. Dysarthria-clumsy hand syndrome: dysarthria, facial weak, dysphagia, mild hand weak/clumsiness
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12
Q

Stroke mimics

A
SAH
SDH
Hypoglycemia
IE
Tumor
Fitting
Vasculitis
Encephalitis
Dural sinus thrombosis
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13
Q

Acute management

A
  1. ABC
  2. Vital sign monitoring, oxygen, IVF (without glucose), NBM, NGT
  3. Check glucose, IV cannula
  4. Urgent help->specialist, consultant
  5. AMPLE: onset, when last well, mimics: post ictal, hypoglycemia, migraine, conversion, recent stroke/epilepsy/MI/AF/Surgery/Trauma/Bleeding/Hx hemorrhagic/HTN, DM/current drugs/Medicine-anticoagulation, insulin, antiHTN
  6. Investigations: non contrast CT, ECG, CBC, UEC, Cr, Coagulation, glucose, Troponins
  7. Indications for thrombolysis->alteplase
  8. Aspirin 150-300mg PO via NGT
  9. Admit to stoke unit
  10. TEDs?
  11. Monitor regularly- vitals, blood glucose levels
  12. Assessment of swallowing
  13. Do not lower BP unless >220/110
  14. oxygen if hypoxic
  15. Paracetamol if fever
  16. Early mobilisation, hydration, enoxaparin
  17. Rehabilitate early
  18. With-hold BP lowering medication for 5 ays unless ++high
  19. Etiological investigation->further imaging, ECHO, holter
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14
Q

Prevention of second stroke

A
  1. Identify underlying cause
  2. Aspirin 70-150mg PO daily
  3. Warfarin if AF
  4. ACEi
  5. Statin therapy
  6. Exercise, diet, weight loss, smoking cessation
  7. Diabetes management
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15
Q

CHADS

A
CHADS2
Stroke risk stratification for patients with
atrial fibrillation
Congestive heart failure (1 point)
Hypertension sBP >160 mmHg/treated
hypertension (1 point)
Age >75 yr (1 point)
Diabetes (1 point)
Prior Stroke or TIA (2 points)
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16
Q

Contraindications to thrombolysis

A
Hx: improving sx, minor sx, seizure
at stroke onset, recent major surgery
(within 14 d) or trauma, recent GI or
urinary hemorrhage (within 21 d),
recent LP or arterial puncture at
noncompressible site, PMHx ICH, sx of
SAH/pericarditis/MI, pregnancy.
P/E: sBP ≥185, dBP ≥110, aggressive
Rx to decrease BP, uncontrolled serum
glucose, thrombocytopenia.
Ix: hemorrhage or mass on CT, high INR
or aPTT.
17
Q

Indications for thrombolysis

A

Onset w/i 4.5 hours
Clinically significant deficit on NIH stroke scale examination
CT does not show hemorrhage/non vascular cause
>18 yo

18
Q

NIH stroke scale examination

A
The scale uses 11 items that evaluate:
• Level of consciousness
• Visual system
• Motor system
• Sensory system
• Language abilities