Lecture 24; Ischemic Brain Injury 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is Brian ischemia?

A

Loss of blood supply to the brain
No oxygen or glucose delivery
Focal or global (CV failure)
Can occur at any stage of life

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2
Q

What is the epidemiology of ischemic stroke in NZ?

A

3rd biggest killer -2500 people/ year
24 New Zealanders every day, a quarter < 65 years old
The leading cause of adult disability
Currently 60,000 stroke survivors in NZ, many with disability

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3
Q

What are the causes of ischemic stroke?

A
  • Atherosclerosis –fatty deposits lining vessel walls –restrict blood flow and clots can break off
  • Thrombus -blood clot develops in a vessel in brain
  • Embolism -blood clot develops elsewhere, usually in the heart or large arteries of the chest -breaks off and blocks small artery in brain
  • Atrial fibrillation -clots form in the atria, dislodge and travel to the brain
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4
Q

What is Neonatal arterial ischemic stroke observed?

A

symptoms observed after birth. MRI shows stroke occurred recently

However, is not normally diagnosed at the time until developmental stages are not met.
- Therefore less treatment options

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5
Q

Are there treatments for pediatric ischemic stroke?

A
  • No treatment

- Respond well to rehab b/c brain is very plastic

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6
Q

What are causes 1-4 of PIS?

A

Congenital heart defects
sickle cell disease
immune disorders
diseases of the arteries

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7
Q

What are causes 5-9 of PIS?

A
blood clotting abnormalities
head or neck trauma
intrauterine infection
premature rupture of membranes
maternal hypertension
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8
Q

What feeds blood supply to the brain?

A

basilar or cerebral artery

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9
Q

What are the two boundries of a stroke affected tissue?

A
  • Ischemic core (infarcted tissue)

- Ischemic Penumbra (salvageable)

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10
Q

How is the core and penumbra differentiated?

A

MRI –Use diffusion weighted imaging to calculate the apparent diffusion coefficient

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11
Q

What happens to an MRI after stroke?

A

In acute cerebral infarction, the decrease in ADC values is the result of:Water moving into the intracellular compartment (diffusion is impeded by organelles)
Cellular swelling narrowing the extracellular space

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12
Q

What is the penumbra?

A

Penumbra –reduced perfusion surrounding infarct
Suppressed protein synthesis, constrained ATP production (Injury progresses through the penumbra as ATP decreases)
Fundamentally reversible but time-limited

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13
Q

What does penumbra injury or recovery depend on?

A

Depends on reperfusion and/or collateral perfusion

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14
Q

What is collateral perfusion?

A

Other smaller arteries…

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15
Q

What are two major collateral perfusion structures?

A

Circle of Willis: redistribute blood supply during extracranialvascular occlusion between carotid and vertebral arteries

Heubner’sanastomoses: determines volume and severity of focal ischemia during constriction of artery distal to Circle of Willis. Individual variability –number and diameter determines collateral supply

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16
Q

What can be used to image the penumbra?

A

MRI Perfusion Weighted Imaging (PWI)

  • Inject contrast (gadolinium)
  • Measured parameters such as time to peak (TTP) or mean transit time (MTT)
  • Measure of cerebral blood flow
  • Reduced in penumbra and ischemic core
  • PWI/DWI mismatch region approximately corresponds to the ischemic penumbra
17
Q

Whats a clot buster drug and when must it be used by?

A

TPA

- Must be used to treat within 3-4hrs to clear clot and restore blood flow
depends on collateral circulation

18
Q

Why is imaging important?

A

Ischemic vs haemorrhagic stroke
Clot busters (tPA)
Better response to clot busters when there is a large penumbra
Can administer TPA after 3 h if significant diffusion/perfusion mismatch
Infarcted tissue can’t be salvaged
Important for future therapies

19
Q

What is normal CBF and when does it become supressed?

A

Adult CBF ~ 50-70 ml/100 g/min CBF

~8 -18 ml/100 g/min = threshold for ion pump failure 

Brain activity is suppressed before threshold for ion failure

20
Q

At what point of CBF does fuel production change to anaerobic?

A

Anaerobic glycolysis

Glucose utilisation increases at 0.35mL/g/min (switching to anaerobic increases utilisation)

Declines below 0.25 mL/g/min

Accumulation of lactate and acidosis

21
Q

At what point CBF does Energy failure occur?

A

Energy Failure below 0.26 mL/g/min

22
Q

When does anoxic depolarisation occur?

A

Anoxic depolarisation below 0.10 mL/g/min

23
Q

What is anoxic depolarisation and how does it all fit in?

A
  • Cells depolarise because of the lack of ATP to maintain membrane gradients.
  • Tissues start to infarct at this point because cells swell and membranes become disrupted
  • Release of neurotransmitters propagates this injury.
24
Q

What is happening in the penumbra?

A

Peri-infarct spreading depression:

  • Depolarisation initiated in infarct core
  • Spreads to peripheral zone
  • Increased metabolic rate due to activated ion exchange pumps
  • Reduced haemodynamic capacity of penumbra -mismatch between blood supply and demand
  • Transient hypoxia and lactate production
25
Q

Describe the relationship between infarct size and depolarisations;

A
  • Linear relationship between number of depolarisations and infarct volume
26
Q

What happens in global cerebral ischemia?

A
The whole brain becomes ischemic
May be the result of whole-body ischemia
Can occur at any stage of life
Perinatal asphyxia
Cardiac arrest
Severe hypotension (shock)
27
Q

What is the common cause of global adult ischemia?

A

Most often:
Primary ischemia + secondary hypoxia

Cardiac Arrest: 1/1000/year (20-75 y); only 20% of patients survive, and most survivors are disabled; 

Shock—-hypotension/hypoperfusion
Heart stops (arrests)
no cardiac output, hypotension

No blood flow to brain
AND no blood flow to lungs hypoxiaBrain ischemia + hypoxia

28
Q

What are the causes of global ischemia in the fetus?

A
Knot in umbilical cord
Compression of cord during labour
Umbilical cord around the neck
Maternal hypotension
Placental insufficiency
Cardiovascular collapse after birth
29
Q

What is the evolution of the global ischemia damage?

A

Evolves slowly over time after focal or global ischaemia

No core and penumbra pattern

Therapeutic windows of opportunity for treatment

Therapeutic hypothermia for HIE