Chapter 23 Stroke Flashcards
Define Stroke.
A stroke is defined by the WHO as the rapid development of clinical signs of cerebral dysfunction, with signs lasting at least 24 hours or leading to death with no apparent cause other than that of vascular origin.
Name the top 3 causes of death.
Heart disease, cancer, stroke.
Describe the classification and subclassifcations of the types of strokes.
The two major types of stroke are ischemic (≈83%) and hemorrhagic (17%).
On further categorizing, 32% are embolic, 31% large vessel thrombotic, 20% small vessel thrombotic, 10% intracerebral hemor-rhagic, and 7% subarachnoid hemorrhagic.
Name 3 populations who are at increased risk of developing stroke.
Males, African Americans, and the elderly are at increased risk for developing stroke.
Name 3 Modifiable risk factors.
HTN, DM, hyper-cholesterolemia, hyperhomocysteinemia, hypercoagulable states, heart disease, carotid arteriosclerosis, substance abuse, obesity, and a sedentary lifestyle.
Name 3 deficits in MCA
Deficits can include c/l hemiplegia/hypesthesia (face and arm worse than leg), c/l homonymous hemianopia, and i/l gaze preference.
Describe clinical presentation in dominant hemisphere MCA involvement
receptive aphasia (inferior division of MCA to Wernicke’s area) and/or expressive aphasia (superior division of MCA to Broca’s area) can occur, but classically patients can learn from demonstration and mistakes.
What is Gerstmann’s syndrome (parietal lobe)?
MCA. consists of asomatognosia (right–left confusion), dyscalculia, finger agnosia, and dysgraphia.
Describe clinical presentation in nondominant hemisphere involvement
spatial dyspraxia and c/l hemineglect may be seen; insight/judgment are often affected (likely to need supervision); ADL recovery is often said to be slower.
Name 3 deficits in Acrodermatitis Chronica Atrophican (ACA)
Deficits can include c/l hemiplegia/hypesthesia (leg worse than arm; face and hand spared), alien arm/hand syndrome, urinary incontinence, gait apraxia, abulia (inability to make decisions), perseveration, amnesia, paratonic rigidity (Gegenhalten, or variable resistance to passive ROM), and transcortical motor aphasia (with a dominant hemisphere ACA lesion).
Name 5 deficits in Posterior Cerebral Artery (PCA).
Deficits can include c/l homonymous hemianopia, c/l hemianesthesia, c/l hemiplegia, c/l hemiataxia, and vertical gaze palsy.
Dominant-sided PCA lesions can lead to what clinical SX?
amnesia, color anomia, dyslexia w/o agraphia, and simultagnosia (defunct perceptual analysis).
Nondominant-sided PCA lesions can lead to what clinical SX?
prosopagnosia (cannot recognize familiar faces).
The central poststroke pain (Dejerine-Roussy or thalamic pain) syndrome can occur with involvement of what branch of the PCA?
thalamogeniculate branch of the PCA.
Name 2 properties of Weber’s syndrome (penetrating branches to the midbrain) (PCA involvement).
i/l CN III palsy and c/l limb weakness).
A b/l PCA stroke can cause what 2 syndromes?
Anton syndrome (cortical blindness, with denial) or Bálint’s syndrome, which consists of optic ataxia, loss of voluntary but not reflex eye movements, and an inability to understand visual objects (asimul-tagnosia).
The lateral medullary (Wallenberg) syndrome is caused by infarction to what artery?
posterior inferior cerebellar artery
Describe the clinical presentation of lateral medullary (Wallenberg) syndrome.
consists of vertigo, nystagmus, dysphagia, dysarthria, dysphonia, i/l Horner’s syndrome, i/l facial pain or numbness, i/l limb ataxia, and c/l pain and temporary sensory loss.
The “locked-in” syndrome is due to infarction to what artery? What is system is spared?
basilar artery. b/l pontine infarcts affecting the corticospinal and bulbar tracts, but sparing the reticular activating system. Patients are awake and sensate, but paralyzed and unable to speak. Voluntary blinking and vertical gaze may be intact.
What is Anton syndrome?
The Anton syndrome (basilar artery) is characterized by cortical blindness with denial.