Stroke Flashcards

1
Q

Differentiating factors for AIS, TIAs, and hemorrhagic stroke

A
  • AIS - focal neuro deficit is associated with injury detectable on MRI
  • TIA - focal neuro deficit that resolves in 1 hr or less
    + RINDs are basically TIAs that take longer than 1hr to resolve, and so are associated with detectable MRI injury but not clinical deficits, so they are called “silent strokes”
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2
Q

Signs and symptoms of ischemic stroke

A

represent 80% of all stroke

  • paresis/paralysis
  • loss of sensation
  • loss of vision in 1 eye (amaurosis fugax) or 1 VF
  • aphasia
  • difficulty with organization or perception
  • clumsiness or lack of balance
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3
Q

Signs and symptoms of hemorrhagic stroke

A

represent 20% of all stroke

  • sudden onset worst HA (SAH)
  • rapid LOC in some
  • neck stiffness/pain
  • photophobia, phonophobia
  • N/V
  • focal neurologic signs frequently minimal or absent; may have subtle CN paresis (often CN3 and Pcom aneurysm)
  • abnormal vitals
  • meningeal signs
  • retinal hemorrhages
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4
Q

Risk factors for ischemic stroke

A
  • Non-modifiable: age, gender, race, genetics/fam hx

- Modifiable: HTN, DM, HLD, smoking, CAS, Afib, obesity, physical inactivity

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5
Q

CBF autoregulation; significance in stroke

A
  • CBF is related to MAP; if MAP is 55-155, CBF can stay about constant via compensation from vascular resistance
  • if MAP is outside the normal range, brain can no longer autoregulate
  • MAP too low: syncope; MAP too high: HTNive encephalopathy (therefore don’t rapidly lower the BP in pts with HTNive stroke)
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6
Q

Major causes of ischemic stroke

A
  • Cardiogenic: arrhythmia, valve disease (MVP, endocarditis), mural thrombus (cardiomyopathy), paradoxical embolus
  • Vasculitis: collagen dz (MCC Lupus), GCA, infectious, hypersensitivity, Wegener’s, Bechet’s, primary CNS
  • Hematologic: hyperviscosity (PCV, MM), hypercoagulable (anti-PL, prot C/S def, cancer, preg, F5L, thrombocytosis), hemoglobinopathies (SCD)
  • Drug-related (street, EtOH, OCPs)
  • Other: FMD, dissection, homocysteinemia, other emboli, vasospasm, migraine
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7
Q

Major causes of hemorrhagic stroke

A
  • aneurysm (arterial [80% of SAH] or mycotic)
  • vascular malformation (i.e., AVMs)
  • traumatic
  • HTN (can cause Charcot Bouchard aneurysms that bleed; most commonly in lenticulostriate arteries)
  • tumor
  • bleeding diathesis
  • anticoag complication
  • vasculitis
  • illicit drugs
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8
Q

Acute treatment options for ischemic stroke

A
  • IV tPA if eligible

- thrombectomy if available

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9
Q

Acute treatment options for hemorrhagic stroke

A
  • for aneurysm: clip, coil, flow diverter
  • for AVM: coils, surgical removal, Gamma knife obliteration
  • for IPH: correct bleeding probs, reduce BP, monitor/tx ICP/CPP
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10
Q

Role of temperature and blood glucose on brain ischemia

A

Pathogenesis of stroke: no O2 –> anaerobic metabolism –> lactic acid build-up –> catabolic mechanisms triggered in the cell

Elevated temp will accelerate the catabolic mechanisms.
Elevated glucose will stimulate glycolysis and increase lactic acid buildup.

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11
Q

Lateral medullary syndrome

A
  • Spinal trigeminal nuc/tract: loss of pain/temp from ipsilateral face
  • Nuc ambiguus: dysarthria and dysphagia
  • STT: loss of pain/temp from contralateral body
  • SCTs: ipsilateral gait ataxia
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12
Q

Pontine syndrome

A
  • MLF: gaze disorders (further caudal)
  • Medial lemniscus: contralateral loss of epicritic sensation
  • Pontine nuclei/cerebellar fibers: bilateral cerebellar ataxia
  • CST: contralateral hemiparesis
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13
Q

Midbrain syndrome

A

(aka Bendikt syndrome)

  • dentato[rubro]thalamic tract/red nucleus: ipsilateral ataxia
  • Oculomotor nucleus: ipsilateral CN3 palsy, loss of pupillary constriction
  • medial lemniscus: contralateral loss of epicritic sensation
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14
Q

Pathogenesis of lacunar stroke

A

Chronic HTN –>

  1. Microatheroma build-up
  2. Microemboli
  3. Lipohyalinosis - the process of change to the vessel muscularis and intima that results in thickening of the wall and narrowing of the lumen
  4. Fibrinoid necrosis - the build-up of amorphous material within the vessel wall
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15
Q

Risk factors for SAH

A
  • tobacco, EtOH use
  • HTN
  • OCPs, stimulant drugs
  • low cholesterol
  • genetics - PCKD, Marfan’s
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16
Q

Work-up for suspected AIS

A
  • HPI, PMH, PE/Neuro exam
  • labs (CBC, Chem, Lipids, coags, tox screen), EKG
  • Radiology: EKG, Head CT/MRI, CUS, DSA
17
Q

Prophylaxis for AIS

A
  • vascular stenting or CEA for stenosis >70%
  • anti-HTN
  • anti-lipids
  • anti-plt for athero
  • anti-coag for cardioembolic
  • anti-DM
  • stop smoking
  • exercise
18
Q

DDx for Ischemic stroke

A
  • hemorrhage
  • SDH
  • syncope/near syncope
  • radiculopathy
  • Bell’s palsy
  • brain tumor
  • seizure
  • hypo/hyperglycemia
  • hypoxia
19
Q

Lumbar punctures

A
  • to prove there’s blood there from SAH and not just traumatic LP, get multiple tubes or centrifuge the tube
  • if after the 3rd tube or centrifuge, there’s still red, then it’s Hgb from lysed RBCs
  • if it’s yellow (xanthochromia) that’s from bilirubin indicating the SAH has been there long enough for Hgb to breakdown and become bilirubin
  • If CT shows SAH
20
Q

MCCs of IPH

A
  1. trauma
  2. HTN (via Charcot Bouchard aneurysms in basal ganglia small arteries that rupture; or cerebral amyloid angiopathies which more often affect cortex)
  3. AVM