1b Cerebral Vasculature Flashcards

1
Q

What percentage of the bodies oxygen consumption does the brain use?

A

20% - therefore the brain is very vulnerable if the blood supply is impaired

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2
Q

Describe the blood supply to the brain?

A

The common carotid artery is a branch of the brachiocephalic trunk - this splits into the internal and external carotid artery

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3
Q

What is the point where the cerebral veins converge?

A

Point of confluence

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4
Q

What are the four types of haemorrhages?

A
  1. Extradural
  2. Subdural
  3. Subarachnoid
  4. Intracerebral
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5
Q

What is the most common cause of an extradural haematoma?

A

Trauma = blow to the pterion - rupture the middle meningeal artery

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6
Q

Why is an extradural haematoma a surgical emergency?

A

arterial bleed, therefore high pressure and loss of blood is fast

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7
Q

Why can the clinical effects of a subdural haematoma be delayed?

A

venous bleed therefore lower pressure so less of a clinical emergency

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8
Q

What will patients with a sub arachnoid bleed experience?

A

Thunderstorm headache

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9
Q

What causes subarachnoid bleeds?

A

ruptured aneurysms

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10
Q

What causes an intracerebral bleed?

A

Spontaneous hypertension

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11
Q

What is a stroke?

A

A rapidly developing focal disturbance of brain function of presumed vascular origin and greater than 24 hours in duration

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12
Q

What are the two main types of strokes?

A

Thrombo-embolic or haemorrhage

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13
Q

What is a TIA?

A

Transient Ischaemic Attack - rapidly reveloping focal disturbance of brain function of presumed vascular origin that resolves completely within 24 hours

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14
Q

What is an infarction?

A

Degenerative changes which occur in the tissue following an occlusion of an artery

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15
Q

What is cerebral ischaemia

A

Lack of sufficient blood supply to the nervous tissues resulting in permanent damage if blood flow is not restored properly

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16
Q

What is thrombosis?

A

formation of a blood clot

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17
Q

What is an embolism?

A

plugging of a small vessel by material carried from a larger vessel eg thrombi from the heart or atherosclerotic debris from the internal carotid

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18
Q

What are some key signs of a stroke?

A

Loss of symmetry
slurred speech
drooping of face and mouth - one side

19
Q

What are the risk factors for stroke?

A

Diabetes mellitus
smoking
Age
Hypertension
Cardiac Disease

20
Q

Draw a diagram showing the cerebral artery perfusion fields?

21
Q

What symptoms would be experienced by patients if they have an anterior cerebral artery blockage?

A

Paralysis of contralateral structures with a tendancy for lower limbs over arm

Disturbance of intellect, executive function and judgment (Abulia)

Loss of appropriate social behaviour

22
Q

What symptoms would be experienced by patients if they have an MIDDLE cerebral artery blockage?

A

“Classic stroke”
Contralateral hemiplagia (upper limbs over the lower limbs)
Contralateral hemisensory deficits
Hemaniopia
Aphasia (L Sided lesion)

23
Q

Why is hemiplagia common in middle cerebral artery conditions?

A

the middle cerebral artery supplies all pathways to the spinal cord, therefore there is likely to be subcortical damage

24
Q

What type of aphasia ill damage to Broca’s area produce?

A

Expressive Aphasia - they can understand but not reply

25
What type of aphasia will damage to Wernicke's area produce?
Receptive Aphasia - cannot understand but can speak
26
What does damage to the posterior cerebral artery result in?
Visual defects - homonymous hemaniopia and visual agnosia
27
What is agnosia?
Inability to recognise faces
28
What is a major risk factor for stroke?
Atherosclerosis - yellow discolouration in the walls of the vessel represent atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries
29
Draw the circle of willis
30
What is the benefit of the circle of willis?
Compensatory flow - if one of the arteries is lacking - the others can compensate
31
What is the treatment for Subdural Haematoma?
Burr Holes - remove skull flap and then remove blood
32
How can you distinguish a SDH from other bleeds?
Delayed presentation = as SDH is a venous bleed therefore lower presure and hence slower presentation
33
Why do you have a persistent headache in SDH?
Due to sheering of the delicate bridging veins in the subdural space
34
What pathologies are seen on a scan of a SDH?
the bleed compressed ventricles on the side of the bleed Other ventricle large as filled with alot of CSF to compensate
35
What are the signs of an intra-cerebellar bleed?
Drowsy, slurred speech, wobbly eye movements, ataxia, broad based gait
36
Which type of bleed is due to hypertension usually?
Intra-parenchymal bleed
37
What is the treatment for Intra-parenchymal bleeds?
Manage hypertension - usually difficult to remove surgically as it is inside the brain
38
Which cerebral artery has the largest perfusion field?
Middle cerebral artery
39
Stroke of which artery results in a disturbance of intellect, executive function and judgement?
Anterior cerebral artery
40
What causes a venous haemorrhage?
Shearing of bridging veins
41
What is the presentation of a subdural haemorrhage?
Gradually worsening headache - due to pressure building up Drowsiness / loss of consciousness due to pressure on the brainstem
42
If a lemon shaped bleed is on a CT, which type of bleed is this?
Extradural bleed
43
What are the clinical symptoms of cerebellar bleeding?
Dysarthia (slurred speech) Wobbly eye movements Ataxia (clumsy hands) Broad based gait
44
How is an intraparenchymal bleed treated?
Manage the risk factors May try remove the bleed via surgery