Ischaemic Stroke + TIA Flashcards
What is the definition of stroke?
- rapidly developing clinical signs or symptoms
- of focal neurological deficit
- lasting more than 24 hours or that lead to death
- with no apparent cause other than cereberovascular**
What is a TIA and how is it different to stroke?
- temporary (usually embolic from carotid atheroma) occlusion of cerebral circulation, caused by ischaemia but without acute infarction
- causing focal neurological deficit lasting under 24hrs
- but actual duration tends to be ~10mins
- no difference in mechanism between TIA + stroke, only difference is magnitude of presentation
- TIA is treated like stroke as it’s a neurological emergency (high risk of stroke recurrence)
How common is stroke?
- every 5 mins, someone in England has a stroke
- 25% of people living to 85 have a stroke
- 25% of strokes occur in those under 65
- stroke accounts for 11% of deaths in E+W
- 20-30% of people who have a stroke die within 1 month
- 3rd commonest cause of death
- commonest cause of adult disability
What are the two types of stroke?
-
ISCHAEMIC (80%) → due to:
- arterial embolism
- thrombosis at site of plaque in major cerebral vessel (ICA)
-
HAEMORRHAGIC (20%) →
- main cause is rupture of intracranial microaneurysm (Charcot-Bouchard aneurysm) in a hypertensive patient
- can also be caused by: venous sinus thrombosis, relapse of MS, SOL, thrombophilia, antiphospholipid syndrome
What is the aetiology of stroke?
- Atherosclerosis → causes thrombotic stroke in large extracranial vessels: most commonly carotids or intracranial arteries arising from CoW
- Cardiac or carotid embolism → embolic stroke from ruptured atherosclerotic plaques or cardiac thrombus lodging in distal narrow sites, bifurcation of common carotid + akinetic segments of myocardium (eg. after MI) are most common sources
- Arterial dissection → in younger population, dissection either of carotid or vertebral arteries, may be no antecedent history of injury to neck, but sudden twisting movements or flexion/extension injuries
- Intracerebral haemorrhage → 2o to chronic unrelated HTN but can be caused by other factors eg. trauma, anticoag therapy, neoplasia + coag disorders
- Lipohyalinosis of small arteries → degenerative process affects small perforating arteries that supply structures deeper to cortex eg. basal ganglia, internal capsule, pons - occlusion of these penetrating arteries causes subcortical infarcts ⇒ ‘lacunes’
- Disease of vessel wall → rare but should always be considered, esp in young pts who present w/ stroke, causes: rheumatoid vasculitis, SLE, polyarteritis nodosa + temporal arteritis
What are the risk factors for haemorrhagic stroke?
- hypertension
- advanced age
- male sex
- asian, black, hispanic
- FHx of haemorrhagic stroke
- haemphilia
- cerebral amyloid aniopathy
- autosomal dominant gene mutations
- hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia
- anticoagulation
- drugs - cocaine, amfetamine
- vascular malformations
- moyamoya disease
What are the risk factors for ischaemic stroke?
- older age
- FHx of stroke
- previous ischaemic stroke
- hypertension
- smoking
- diabetes mellitus
- atrial fibrilation
- cormorbid cardiac conditions
- carotid artery stenosis
- sickle cell disease
- dyslipidaemia
- lower socio-economic status
What are differential diagnoses for stroke?
- hypoglycaemia
- migraine
- epilepsy
- multiple sclerosis
- brain tumours
- syncope
- CNS infections - encephalitis, meningitis
- head injury
In stroke, symptoms are usually negative (losing speech, power), whereas in mimics, positive features (tingling, aura) are more likely
Stroke is a disease of the blood vessels supplying the brain. Commonly (80%) it results as of blockage of large + small arteries, and sometimes (20%) rupture of small arteries w/ bleeding. Rupture of large arteries are usually due to Berry aneurysms, resulting in SAH.
What general points should be asked about in a stroke history?
- remember importance of focal neurological symptoms of acute onset
- contiguous parts of body affected concurrently (no spread)
- negative vs postive symptoms
- loss of consciousness + headache are atypical
- risk factors
- family history
- ETOH + rec drugs (eg cocaine)
In a stroke examination we want to look for an early diagnosis and potential causes.
What things are we looking for?
- gen inspection → obvious hemiparesis, facial weakness, neglect of one side
- inspection → xanthoma, stigmata of endocarditis, marfanoid, Fabry’s
- pulse → AF
- BP → hypertension
- CVS → murmurs, carotid + renal bruits, PVD
-
neuro → full exam!
- cranial nerves (full) → check for visual inattention
- fundoscopy → hypertensive/diabetic retinopathy
- PNS → check for drift
- gait
- cerebellar exam
- cortical signs → inattention, apraxia, dysphasia
- speech → dysarthria, dysphasia, fluency, repetition, can they follow 1,2,3 stage commands?
What is the difference between cortical and subcortical symptoms?
- Stroke may affect cortex → ie. frontal, parietal, temporal lobes
- Stroke may affect subcortex → ie. internal capsule, thalamus, basal ganglia, brainstem + cerebellum
- Cortical strokes may disrupt higher cognitive function, eg. a left MCA stroke to inferior frontal lobe may result in expressive aphasia
- It is uncommon for subcortical strokes to affect language
- Motor + sensory impairments can be helpful in differentiating cortical vs subcortical stroke
- Subcortical brainstem lesions may present with extraocular movement impairments, diplopia, dysphagia, dysarthria, nystagmus
- A subcortical stroke in the cerebellum may present with nausea, vomiting, vertigo, imbalance. Exam may reveal nystagmus, ataxia and tremor.
What are the major blood vessels that supply the anterior and posterior circulation of the brain?
- Each internal carotid artery bifurcates into middle and anterior cerebral arteries
What is the Circle of Willis?
- anastomosis of anterior and posterior circulations
- ACA supplies medial frontal + parietal lobes
- MCA supplies majority of lateral hemisphere
- PCA supplies medial/inferior temporal + occipital lobes
UMN lesions can result from damage to any nerves within the CNS, before the final common output, eg. the cerebral cortex or internal capsule. UMN lesions commonly occur following stroke or tumours.
What are the key features of an upper motor neuron lesion?
- initial phase → flaccid limbs w/ loss of reflexes
- long term:
- spasticity
- hyperreflexia
- clonus
- positive babinski sign
Anterior circulation infarcts are most common (50%). These include the ACA and MCA.
What are features of an ACA infarct?
- contralateral motor / sensory loss (lower limbs > face > upper limbs)
- apraxia/gait apraxia → individual has difficulty with the motor planning to perform tasks or movements when asked, provided that the request or command is understood and the individual is willing to perform the task
- frontal release signs - primitive reflexes (grasping)
- abulia (apathy / loss of motivated behaviour)