Neuro - CVA Flashcards

1
Q

Classify acute ischaemic strokes

A

Bamford ClassTACS - (MCA)all three of- homonymous hemianopia higher cerebral dysfunction (dysphasia) Unilateral motor/sensory deficit with 2/3 or arm/leg/facePACS (partial, MCA, ACA)two out three TACSLACS (lacunar, small penetrating vessels) Ataxia hemiparesis Dysarthria Sensorimotor deficit not covered by TACS/PACSPOCS (brain stem, cerebellum) isolated homonymous hemianopia/cortical blindness Brainstem/Cerebellar syndromes LOC

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2
Q

Clinical features by territory - Anterior cerebral artery

A

Behaviour change| Weakness of contralateral leg

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3
Q

Clinical feature by territory - MCA

A

Weakness of contralateral face and armAphasia, dysarthriaHemianopiaSensory deficit

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4
Q

Clinical feature by territory - Posterior Cerebral Artery

A

Visual field defects| Sensoriy def

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5
Q

Clinical features - vertebrobasilar

A

Dizzy
Ataxic
Change in voice/swallow

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6
Q

Clinical feature - cerebral vein and sinuses

A

Decreased conciousnessHeadacheVomiting

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7
Q

NICE criteria for imaging:

A

1Perform brain imaging immediately with a non-enhanced CT for people with suspected acute stroke if any of the following apply (see additional information):indications for thrombolysis or thrombectomyon anticoagulant treatmenta known bleeding tendencya depressed level of consciousness (Glasgow Coma Score below 13)unexplained progressive or fluctuating symptomspapilloedema, neck stiffness or feversevere headache at onset of stroke symptoms.If thrombectomy might be indicated, perform imaging with CT contrast angiography following initial non-enhanced CT. Add CT perfusion imaging (or MR equivalent) if thrombectomy might be indicated beyond 6 hours of symptom onset. [2008, amended 2019]1.3.3Perform scanning as soon as possible and within 24 hours of symptom onset in everyone with suspected acute stroke without indications for immediate brain imaging. [2008]

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8
Q

Other imaging in stroke

A

Non-contrast CT - rules out haemorrahge, doesnt reliably demonstrate infarct
MRI
Carotid doppler
TTE
ECG
TOE (and bubble echo)
TCD

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9
Q

When to thrombolyse

A

Alteplase is recommended within its marketing authorisation for treating acute ischaemic stroke in adults if:treatment is started as soon as possible within 4.5 hours of onset of stroke symptoms andintracranial haemorrhage has been excluded by appropriate imaging techniques

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10
Q

When to control BP in ishcaemic stroke:

A

Anti-hypertensive treatment in people with acute ischaemic stroke is recommended only if there is a hypertensive emergency with one or more of the following serious concomitant medical issues:hypertensive encephalopathyhypertensive nephropathyhypertensive cardiac failure/myocardial infarctionaortic dissectionpre-eclampsia/eclampsia. [2008, amended 2019]1Blood pressure reduction to 185/110 mmHg or lower should be considered in people who are candidates for intravenous thrombolysis. [2008]

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11
Q

Contra-indications to thrombolysis

A

Acute or previous intracranial haemorrhage
BP> 185
Head trauama of stroke in last 3/12
Coagulopathy/thrombocytopenia (INR>1.7)Oral anticoagulantsSurgery in 14 daysGI/GU bleedHypo/hyperglycaemiaSeizureCNS lesionsRecent MI

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12
Q

BM range

A

4-10mmol/L

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13
Q

When to do decompressive craniectomy

A

should be performed within 48 hours of symptom onset
clinical deficits that suggest infarction in the territory of the middle cerebral artery, with a score above 15 on the NIHSS
decreased level of consciousness, with a score of 1 or more on item 1a of the NIHSS
signs on CT of an infarct of at least 50% of the middle cerebral artery territory:with infarct volume greater than 145 cm3, as shown on diffusion-weighted MRI scan. [2019]
Age<60

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14
Q

Evidence for decompressive craniectomy

A

DESTINY, DECIMAL, HAMLET
Reduced mortality 71- 21%
But with no good outcomes in survivors
DESTINY II (age over 60) nearly all survivors disabled

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15
Q

Evidence for hypothermia in Stroke

A

Cochrane - no effect on mortality or outcomes
EuroHYP-1 to 34C - no effect, struggled to achieve hypothermia

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16
Q

Summarise the management of stroke

A

1) investigate - bloods, imaging, ECG, echo2) physiology - BP management, sugar, SaO2>94%, normothermia3) aspirin 300mg ASAP4) thrombolyse5) consider craniectomy6) IR - thrombectomy (6 hours)7) General - VTE, physio, swallow, nutrition, pressure areas

17
Q

When might a stroke come to ICU

A

Seizures
Airway compromise
Deteriorating neurology
Mass effect and large SOL
Resp failure
In order to do interventions
Tertiary centre

18
Q

Risk factors for pneumonia in stroke

A

Old age
Dysarthria, aphasia
Cognitive impairment
Abnormal water swallow test
Severe post stroke disability

19
Q

When does focal cerebral ischaemia cause coma?#

A

Brainstem stroke - Basilar artery stroke Malignant MCA - oedema –> herniationCerebral venous thrombosis –> intracranial hypertension, oedema and seizures

20
Q

Describe the different types of stroke depending on the vessel they effect?

A

Large Vessel
- Carotid - symptoms similar to that of an ACA or MCA stroke. Can also get Amaurosis Fugax if ophthalmic artery affected
- Vertebrobasilar System - CN palsies, POCs symptoms

Medium Vessel
- ACA - Motor and or sensory deficits, LE &raquo_space; face and UE. abulia, rigidity
- MCA - Motor and sensory deficit, UE, Face >LE, Homonymous hemianopia, aphasia, neglect
- PCA - Homonymous hemianopia, ataxia, visual hallucinations, sensory loss, CN palsy, motor deficit

Small vessel
- lacunar - pure motor, pure sensory, dysarthria

21
Q

What criteria would prompt Neuro interventional radiology in a stroke?

A
  • Large arterial occlusion
  • NIHSS > 6
  • Within 6 hours of symptoms
22
Q

When does focal cerebral ischaemia result in coma?

A

1 Brainstem stroke: basilar artery occlusion causes ischaemia of the reticular
activating system

2 Malignant MCA syndrome: cerebral oedema leading to transtentorial herniation

3 Cerebral venous thrombosis: causes intracranial hypertension, cerebral
oedema and seizures