Chapter 33: Stroke Flashcards
How is acute ischemic stroke (aka, a non-cardioembolic stroke) caused
By a thrombus that forms during a cerebral atherosclerotic infarction
How does a cardioembolic stroke occur
when an embolus forms in the heart and travels to the brain
A common cause of cardioembolic stroke
AFib
Risk factors for stroke
HTN (most important) AFib Gender (F > M) Ethnicity (↑risk in AA) Age > 55 years Atherosclerosis Diabetes Prior stroke or TIA Smoking Dyslipidemia Patent Foramen Ovale (PFO) Sickle Cell Disease
What is a TIA
caused by a temporary clot, or block of blood flow, in the brain.
Symptoms are the same as stroke, but disappear on their own within minutes to a few hrs; there is NO permanent damage
Seek immediate medical attention: TIAs are often a warning for a future full stroke
Signs and symptoms of stroke
F.A.S.T
- Face: ask the person to smile. Does one side of the face droop or is it numb? Is the smile uneven?
Arms: ask the person to raise both arms. Does one arm drift downward?
Speech: ask the person to repeat a simple sentence. Are the words slurred? Is the sentence repeated correctly?
Time: if the person shows any of these sx, even if they go away, call 911 immediately
What is performed in stroke patients within 20 min of arrival to ED
Brain imaging
using CT
Immediate goal for ischemic stroke
Restore blood flow to the ischemic area of the brain
want to obtain complete neurological recovery
MOA of alteplase
recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) that binds to fibrin in a thrombus
and converts plasminogen to plasmin, resulting in fibrinolysis
What is the ONLY fibrinolytic drug that is used in acute ischemic stroke
Alteplase
Patients are candidates for alteplase if a clot is confirmed on brain imaging and the following criteria for timing are met:
- Can be administered within 3 hours of symptom onset
- It can be administered within 4.5 hours of symptom onset in select patients (not FDA-approved)
- It can be administered within 60 min of hospital arrival (door-to-needle time)
Alteplase CI
- Active bleed (e.g., internal bleed, ICH)
- Conditions or labs that increase risk of bleed (e.g., severe HTN, INR > 1.7)
- Drug interactions with bleeding risk (e.g., anticoagulants)
- Severe, uncontrolled HTN (BP > 185/110 mmHg)
- History of recent stroke
alteplase brand name
Activase
Max dose of alteplase in ischemic stroke
90 mg
What must be excluded before using alteplase
intracranial hemorrhage
Alteplase SE
Major bleeding (e.g., ICH)
ASA __-__ mg PO within __-__ hrs after stroke onset is recommended to prevent early recurrent stroke
162 – 325
24-48
Which antihypertensive drug classes have the best evidence for stroke risk reduction
ACEi
thiazide diuretics