cerebral blood flow Flashcards

intra-cranial haemorrhage: explain the possible consequences of subdural or epidural haemorrhage

1
Q

4 types of haemorrhagic strokes

A

extradural (between dura mater and skull, no true space so putting pressure on brain), subdural (between dura mater and arachnoid mater - bridging veins rupture so lower pressure bleed; space exists so not noticed initially), subarachnoid (between arachnoid mater and pia mater; most vessels and CSF in this space; caused by genetic weakness in vessel walls - berry aneurysms), intracerebral (bleed in brain itself)

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2
Q

features of extradural haemorrhagic stroke

A

trauma, immediate effects; surgical emergency with craniotomy

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3
Q

features of subdural haemorrhagic stroke

A

trauma, delayed effects

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4
Q

features of subarachnoid haemorrhagic stroke

A

ruptured aneurysms; difficult to treat as must get into vessels

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5
Q

features of intracerebral haemorrhagic stroke

A

spontaneous hypertensive; blood accumulates in ventricles and tissue itself

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6
Q

what sinus does dura mater open up to form

A

dura mater opens up in caudal medial to form superior sagittal sinus

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