9/26 Stroke Syndromes - Glendinning Flashcards

1
Q

stroke/CVA

A

cerebrovascular accident

focal neurological deficit of vascular origin due to abrupt incidence of vascular insufficiency and/or bleeding in regions in/immediately adjacent to brain

​in US, 87% ischemic, 10% hemorrhagic, 3% subarachnoid hemorrhagic

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2
Q

predicted deficits in diff regions of cortex:

  • motor cortex
  • somatosensory cortex
  • frontal eye fields
  • primary visual cortex
  • primary auditory cortex
  • Broca’s area (dominant)
  • Wernicke’s area (dominant)
  • parietal association cortex (R)
A

motor cortex: contralateral hemiparesis

somatosensory cortex: contralat sensory loss or “cortical sensory” loss (graphesthesia, sterognosis)

frontal eye fields; paralysis of contralat horizontal gaze

primary visual cortex: contralat homonymous hemianopsia

primary auditory cortex: diminished localization of auditory inputs

Broca’s area (dominant, L): motor aphasia

Wernicke’s area (dominant, L): sensory aphasia

R parietal association cortex: contralat hemineglect

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3
Q

Frontal Association Cortex signs

A

perseveration: getting stuck when asked to view a changing pattern

impersistence: loss of sustained movement (sticking out tongue, holding up arms)

frontal release signs: grasp, root, suck, snouth

Gegenhalten: increased voluntary tone

personality changes

  • disinhibition → orbitofrontal lesion
  • abulia (loss of motivation/action) → dorsolateral convexity

mood changes:

  • left → depression
  • right → manic

magnetic gait: shuffling

incontinence (with bilateral medial lesions)

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4
Q

circulation terminology

ant vs post

Circle of Willis

A

anterior circulation arises from internal carotid artery

  • MCA
  • ACA

posterior circulation arises from vertebral artery

  • PCA

Circle of Willis references the circular formation of interconnected PCA/int carotid/MCA/ACA arteries via anterior and posterior communicating arteries

  • gives potential for recovery in cases where proximal artery is blocked
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5
Q

anterior cerebral artery

A

mainly supplies:

  • medial portion of frontal lobe
  • medial portion of parietal lobe
  • ventral basal ganglia (near point of entry into brain)

cortical areas supplied:

  • medial portions of frontal lobe and anterior parietal lobe → lower limb motor/sensory portions
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6
Q

ACA stroke

expected issues

left-sided ACA strokes?

right-sided ACA strokes?

A

hits medial frontal/parietal lobe (pre and post central gyri)

  • contralateral hemiparesis
  • contralateral sensory deficit
    • LEGS > arms in both

possibilities:

  • L ACA stroke: transcortical motor aphasia
  • R ACA stroke: hemineglect
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7
Q

deep branches of ACA

what do they supply?

what is the effect of a stroke in these branches?

A

recurrent arteries of Heubner

supply:

  • anterior limb of internal capsule (frontopontine and caudate-putamen)
  • head of caudate nucleus

strokes in ACA branches dont usually produce specific deficits

why? collateral circ! MCA branches and Circle of Willis handle it

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8
Q

middle cerebral artery

A

largest cerebral artery, most prone to strokes

  • travels to lateral cortex with several branches supplying subcortical regions

deficits depend on portion of artery occluded!

  • base: stem aka M1
    • gives off lenticulostriate aa. perfusing basal ganglia and internal capsule
    • continues onward to insula/operculum
  • MCA superior div
  • MCA inferior div
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9
Q

lenticulostriate arteries

A

deep penetrating branches off M1 of MCA supplying basal ganglia, internal capsule

  • prone to narrowing, esp in patients with longstanding HTN
  • common site of lacunar infarct → contralateral hemiplegia (“pure motor”), poss basal ganglia signs
    • can also see “pure sensory” or “motor/sensory deficits”

deficits

  • L MCA deep territory: right pure motor hemiparesis of UMN
  • R MCA deep territory: left pure motor hemiparesis of UMN
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10
Q

superior and inferior divisions of MCA

what do they serve?

what functions are represented?

A

superior → region anterior to central sulcus

  • motor to contralateral body (upper > lower) and face
  • horizontal gaze to opposite side (FEF)
  • L side: speech motor (Broca’s aphasia)
  • R side: attention

inferior → region posterior to central sulcus & temporal regions

  • sensory to contralateral body (upper > lower)
  • visual field projections (optic radiations)
  • L side: speech sensory (Wernicke’s aphasia)
  • R side: attention
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11
Q

MCA stroke in the STEM

A

end up hitting everything

  • severe sensorimotor deficit in contralateral body (pre-, post-central gyri, internal capsule)
  • transient paralysis of horizontal gaze to opposite side → gaze preference to side of lesion!
  • L sided? global aphasia (speech areas)
  • R sided? overall neglect (parietal assoc cortex)
  • visual field deficits (visual projections)

*confusion from temporal lobe damage can occur

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12
Q

MCA strokes and aphasias

A

superior branch of MCA → Broca’s aphasia

  • no repetition
  • comprehension
  • disfluent speech

inferior branch of MCA → Wernicke’s aphasia

  • no repetition
  • no comprehension
  • fluent speech

stem of MCA → global aphasia

  • no rep
  • no comprehension
  • disfluent aphasia
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13
Q

cortical vs subcortical lesions

A

LOOK for CORTICAL DEFICITS

  • visual
  • higher cortical
  • oculomotor
  • language
  • apraxia

“pure motor” hemiparesis? prob lesion in internal capsule, ventral pons, cerebral crus

+ associated cortical signs? lesion in cortex!

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14
Q

anterior choroidal artery

anterior choroidal artery syndrome

A

deep branch from internal carotid

  • ICA gives off MCA, ACA, and…
    • ophthalmic a → eye
    • anterior choroidal artery → optic tract and internal capsule below optic tract

syndrome:

  • contralat homonymous hemianopsia (optic tract), no macular sparing
  • contralat hemiplegia: “pure motor” hemiparesis (post limb of int capsule)
  • contralat hemianasthesia possible
  • possible basal ganglia signs
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15
Q

posterior cerebral artery

A
  • supplies: midbrain, thalamus, medial temporal, medial occipital lobe
  • cortical supply: mainly medial surface, also incl temporal/occipital/parietal regions

deficits:

  • damage to primary visual area → contralateral homonymous hemianopsia
  • L side: transcortical sensory aphasia
    • repetition/fluency intact, but comprehension problem (like Wernicke’s except rep intact)
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16
Q

alexia without agraphia

A

inability to read WITHOUT inability to write

(can write, cant read)

lesions to dominant occipital cortex extending INTO POSTERIOR CORPUS CALLOSUM

  • R visual fields have nowhere to go (visual field deficit)
  • vision in L visual field is intact, BUT cant cross over into L hemi via corpus callosum! → no reading possible

right homonymous hemianopsia

17
Q

PCA and role in deep supply

A

PCA gives deep supply to thalamus (and possibly internal capsule - affected in larger strokes)

deep or stem strokes…

  • contralateral hemianesthesia
  • contralat central pain syndrome (10%)

larger strokes…

  • contralateral hemiparesis
18
Q

watershed infarcts

A

5-10% of all strokes

occur between cerebral artery territories → areas most susceptible to decr systemic bp or stroke

  • ACA/MCA watershed area
  • PCA/MCA watershed area
19
Q

MCA-ACA watershed infarcts

A

“man in a barrel” syndrome

  • sensory and motor loss of proximal upper limbs
  • LITTLE EFFECT on legs

transcortical motor aphasia

  • nonfluent
  • comprehension
  • repetition
20
Q

MCA-PCA watershed infarcts

A

transcortical sensory aphasia

  • fluent
  • no comprehension
  • repetition

can also produce a visual field deficit

  • loss of higher order vision fx
  • cortical blindness if bilat