Pathology of Cerebrovascular Disease Flashcards

1
Q

Do veins travel with arteries in the brain?

A

No they are not in tandem

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2
Q

What are the main venous structures in the brain?

A

Large venous sinuses within the dura

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3
Q

How are the venous sinuses fed and how do these vessels travel?

A

By bridging veins from the brain, they cross the meninges from the brain towards the skull

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4
Q

How are veins linked to those outside the skull?

A

Emissary veins

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5
Q

What is the Who definition of stroke?

A

Focal neurological deficit due to disruption of its blood supply

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6
Q

What is the most common cause of stroke?

A

Ischaemic stroke - vessel blocked by thrombus

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7
Q

What percentage of strokes are haemorrhagic due to a ruptured vessel?

A

10%

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8
Q

What are the major features of stroke?

A

Sudden weakness or numbness of the face, arm or leg most often on one side of the body

Other -
Confusion/speech difficulties
Difficulty seeing
Headache

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9
Q

What are the three major categories of stroke?

A

TIA - last 24 hours but minor neuro deficit

Disabling stroke - >24 hours with persisting disability that impairs independence

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10
Q

What portion of the CO is dedicated to the cerebral blood flow?

A

15%

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11
Q

Are neurons in the brain able to regenerate after damage|?

A

No

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12
Q

How many strokes have the potential for thrombolysis?

A

85%

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13
Q

What is Virchow’s triad of occlusion?

A

Change in vessel wall
‘’ flow
‘’ content

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14
Q

Give some causes of CNS ischaemia

A
Atherosclerosis
Thrombosis
Embolism
Hypotension - MI, massive blood loss
Arterial spasm following subarachnoid haemorrhage
Systemic vascular disease e.g. arteritis 
Mechanical compression 
Venous obstruction
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15
Q

What artery is most commonly blocked causing a regional infarction?

A

Middle cerebral artery

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16
Q

What is acute cerebral cortex ischaemia?

A

Ischaemia affecting the cerebral hemispheres and the internal capsule. There is contralateral hemiparesis or other signs
May result in loss of brain tissue and cyst

17
Q

What is useful when determining whether the ischaemia is thrombotic or embolic?

A

Whether there are pro-thrombotic underlying features like arteriosclerosis, smoking, diabetes

Whether there is a probable source of embolus like cardiac arrhythmia or thoracic aortic aneurysm

Consider whether there is one singe large embolus or multiple smaller infarcts

18
Q

What is watershed infarction?

A

When a particular artery is occluded, the perfusion territory of the artery is particularly affected creating zonal patterns of ischaemia and infarction

19
Q

Outline the pathogenesis of haemorrhagic stroke?

A

Rupture of a small artery, usually at a bifurcation leading to catastrophic haemorrhage

20
Q

What proportion of stokes are haemorrhagic?

A

15%

21
Q

Where are the vast majority of intracerebral haemorrhage?

A

Basal ganglia - 80%

22
Q

Describe the process of subarachnoid haemorrhage

A

Rupture of saccular (Berry) aneurysm on circle of Willis
Usually a branching point of the anterior part of the circle - internal carotid, anterior communicating, middle cerebral most common

23
Q

What are the three arteries most commonly the location of a Berry aneurysm?

A

Internal carotid
Anterior communicating
Middle cerebral

24
Q

What are the consequences of intracranial haemorrhage?

A

Death due to rapid increase in intracranial pressure - especially sub arachnoid