CVA and TIA Flashcards

1
Q

80% of embolic strokes are from ______________________

A

a fib

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2
Q

What are the risk factors for CVA (stroke) ?

A
  1. HTN
  2. DM
  3. Dislipidemia
  4. cigarette smoking
  5. cardiac disease
  6. recreational drugs/etoh
  7. family history
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3
Q

What is the NIH stroke scale?

A

it looks at level of consciousness, gaze, visual fields, motor, sensory, language. It allows for monitoring of symptoms over time
scale from 0-5

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4
Q

There are two types of CVA:
1.
2.

Ischemic stroke can be either ___________ or ___________

A
  1. ischemic
  2. hemorrhagic

can be either embolic (travels from another part of the body) or thrombotic (clot forms in an artery)

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5
Q

Lacunar infarcts are small lesions ( < 5mm) in ________________. They usually occur in the
1.
2.
3.
4.
It is associated with poorly controlled _______ and ________. The symptoms may progress for _________ to _________ hours. On the CT scan, it is seen as _______________________.

A

small arterioles
1. basal ganglia
2. pons
3. cerebellum
4. ant limb of internal capsule

HTN, DM
24 to 36
small, punched out hypodense areas

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6
Q

A thrombotic stroke is caused by a thrombus (blood clot) that develops in an artery supplying blood to the brain usually because of repeated build up of
1. ______________________
2. _______________________
3. ______________ such as __________ and ____________ carried in the blood.

The body perceives the buildup as an ______________ to the vessel wall and responds the way it would to a small wound - it forms ________________. The blood clots get caught on the plaque on the vessel walls, eventually stopping the blood flow.

A
  1. fatty deposits
  2. calcium
  3. clotting factors such as fibrinogen and cholesterol.

injury, blood clots

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7
Q

During an embolic infarct, the clot forms outside of the brain - usually in the ____________ or ______________ of the upper chest and neck and is transported through the blood stream to the brain. There, it eventually reaches a blood vessel small enough to block its passage. Emobli are most commonly bits and pieces of _________________.

A

heart, large arteries
atherosclerotic plaque

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8
Q

Hemmorhagic stroke occurs when _________________________ and blood begins to leak directly into _______________ and or into the clear ______________. The rupture can be caused by the force of ______________. It can also originate from a weak spot in a blood vessel wall (cerebral aneurysm) or other blood vessel malformation in or around the brain.

A

a vessel in the brain suddenly ruptures
brain/tissue and or into the clear CSF
high BP

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9
Q

The symptoms of a hemmorhagic stroke appear without warning. The sudden increase in blood volume = increase intracranial pressure that cannot be released. This may trigger severe
1. ________________ headache
2. _________________
3. __________________
4. ___________________
5. ___________________
or death.

A
  1. thunderclap
  2. neck pain
  3. double vision
  4. N/V
  5. Loss of consciousness
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10
Q

Which stroke has the higher fatality rate and overall poor prognosis?

A

hemorrhagic stroke

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11
Q

The imaging to quickly obtain in someone with a hemorrhagic CVA is a _________________ to discover the bleed.

A

CT

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12
Q

In cerebral circulation…..

opthalmic artery >
ACA >
MCA>
PCA >

A
  1. vision loss
  2. weakness and decreased sensation contralateral leg and arm, lack of initiative, confusion
  3. contralateral hemiplegia, hemisensory loss and homonymous hemianopia, eyes deviated towards lesion also can see global aphasia
  4. weakness, confusion, vision changes, difficulty swallowing, agitation
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13
Q

What is the acute treatment for CVA?

A

if the symptoms started within 3 hours (up to 4.5) may be a candidate for TPA. If within 3-6 hours may be a candidate for endovascular mechanical embolectomy

Corticosteroids if there is brain swelling

BP should ONLY be lowered if systolic is > 185 within the first two weeks of the CVA.

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14
Q

What is the treatment of ischemic CVA?

A

TPA given IDEALLY within 3 hours of symptom onset (can be used up to 4.5 hours)
screen for contraindications, bleeding risk.

Endovascular procedures
-Deliver TPA directly to clot
-Remove large clots

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15
Q

What other tests need to be ordered for ischemic CVA?

A
  1. Carotid doppler
  2. MRA (consider CEA in pts with stenosis > 80% )
  3. Cardiac echo
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16
Q

What is the treatment for embolic CVA?

A

treat with anticoagulation in cases of a fib or if a fib is highly suspected while the diagnosis is being made.
statins help lower the risk of having another CVA or MI as well as aspirin and clopidogrel x 3 weeks then aspirin only forever

17
Q

TIA are focal deficits that less than ______________ hours. They start abruptly and recovery is rapid. Risk of ______________ is highest in the month after a TIA. Important cause is __________________.

A

24, CVA, embolization.

18
Q

What are the CV causes of TIA?

A

rheumatic heart disease, mitral valve disease, cardiac arrythmia, infective endocarditis, hypotension, hematological disorders, drug use/alcohol

19
Q

What are the symptoms of TIA?

A

carotids:
contralateral parasethias or paresis of arm, leg, face, slowness of movement, dysphasia, monocular visual loss.

vertebrobasilar: vertigo, diplopia, dysarthria, dimness or blurry vision, perioral numbness and weakness or sensory complaints

20
Q

Stroke risk is > in patients older than 60……

A
  1. DM
  2. TIA that lasts longer than 10 min
  3. Signs of weakness
  4. speech impairment
  5. gait disturbance