Subarachnoid Haemorrhage Flashcards

1
Q

Where does blood collect in a subarachnoid haemorrhage?

A

Between the arachnoid mater and pia mater

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2
Q

In what age group do SAHs usually occur?

A

Middle aged < 60

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3
Q

What is the cause of most SAHs?

A

Berry aneurysm rupture 70%

15% multiple

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4
Q

How do patients usually present?

A

Sudden onset thunderclap headache
Meningism - stiff neck, photophobia, headache
Nausea and vomiting
Focal neurological deficits (CN lesions)
Seizure
Reduced consciousness - drowsiness, confusion, coma

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5
Q

What signs are associated with SAH?

A

Neck stiffness
Kernig’s sign - thigh flexed at hip and knee at 90 degree angle and subsequent knee extension causes pain
Terson’s syndrome - intraocular haemorrhage
Focal neurology at presentation may suggest site of aneurysm e.g pupil changes may indicate CN III palsy with a posterior communicating artery aneurysm

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6
Q

What are the common sites for berry aneurysms?

A

Artery junctions e.g between anterior communicating and anterior cerebral artery or posterior communicating and ICA

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7
Q

Other than berry aneurysms, what else can cause a SAH?

A
Arterio-venous malformations 10%
Hypertension 10% 
Traumatic 
Vasculitis 
Tumour invading blood vessels 
Encephalitis
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8
Q

Around what percentage of the population may have a berry aneurysm?

A

3%

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9
Q

What are some risk factors?

A

FH
HTN
Heavy alcohol consumption
Smoking
Abnormal connective tissue disease, Ehlers-Danlos, Marfans, neurofibromatosis
Polycystic kidney disease (autosomal dominant)
Aortic coarctation
Bleeding disorders
Cocaine - raises BP and inflammation inside vessel walls

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10
Q

What are some differentials for SAH?

A

Meningitis
Migraine
Intracerebral bleed

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11
Q

What tests should be done?

A

CT scan urgent - detects 90% in first 24 hours
Fresh blood will show up bright on plain CT (don’t use contrast)
The sensitivity is 50% by 72 hours

Consider LP if CT negative but history suggestive of SAH

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12
Q

Why does LP need to be done more than 12 hours after headache onset?

A

To allow breakdown of RBCs
Positive sample is xanthrochromic - yellow due to released bilirubin from RBC breakdown

Differentiates between a “bloody tap” and old blood from SAH

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13
Q

How should SAH be managed?

A

Stabilise patient, re examine CNS often, chart BP, pupils and GCS
Treat cerebral vasospasm -nimodipine
Maintain hydration and avoid extremes of BP - control systolic below 150
Neurosurgical intervention if large bleed

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14
Q

What are some potential complications?

A
Rebleeding = commonest cause of death - first few days 
Cerebral ischaemia due to vasospasms 
Hydrocephalus 
Focal neurological deficits
Coma 
Seizures 
Cognitive decline 
Frequent headaches
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15
Q

What should be done before surgery?

A

Cerebral angiogram

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16
Q

What 2 surgical techniques can be employed?

A

Coiling or clipping - depends on access and size of aneurysm
Coiling is preferred where possible

17
Q

How is the CSF analysed after LP?

A

A spectrometer used to look for bilirubin peak

18
Q

Rebleeding occurs in what percentage of patients at 24 hours, 14 days, 6 months?

A

4% at 24 hours
25% at 14 days
60% at 6 months

19
Q

Blood outside the arteries can cause?

A

Vasospasm - severe infarction can occur (nimodipine must be given early to prevent cerebral vasospasm)

20
Q

Due to vasospasm, 25% of patients will have signs of…after SAH

A

TIA/stroke

21
Q

When is LP contraindicated?

A

Raised ICP

22
Q

If a berry aneurysm is found incidentally, above what size should be treated?

A

Over 7mm should be treated with surgical clipping or coiling

23
Q

Describe coiling

A

Catheter inserted into artery in leg/groin - tube guided into aneurysm where tiny platinum coils passed through tube and into the aneurysm. Once aneurysm full of coils, blood cannot enter it - sealed off from main artery.