PBL 5 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the difference between a stroke and a TIA

A

Stroke is cerebral deficit lasting > 24 hours, whereas TIA is a sudden focal deficit lasting less than 24 hours with complete recovery

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2
Q

What are the main symptoms of stroke?

A

Sudden limb weakness on one side of the body
Loss of sensation/abnormal sensations on one side of the body
Difficulty speaking (aphasia)
Slurred speech (dysarthria)
Dizziness, blurring, loss of vision in one eye
Loss of balance and coordination
Inability to swallow safely

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3
Q

What does the acronym F.A.S.T stand for?

A

Face - look for facial asymmetry
Arms - looks for sudden arm weakeness
Speech - look for speech problems
Time - time to call 999

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4
Q

Which areas of the cerebrum are supplied by the aneterior cerebral artery?

What effect would occlusion result in?

A

Medial portions of the frontal lobes, and superior medial parietal lobes

Occlusion - paralysis and sensory loss in the contralateral lower part of the body

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5
Q

Which areas of the cerebrum are supplied by the middle cerebral artery?

What effect would occlusion result in?

A

Lateral surface of the hemisphere (apart from inferior temporal lobe). Includes Broca’s and wernicke’s

Occlusion results in paralysis/sensory loss to contralateral upper limb and face.
Occlusion in dominant hemisphere results in aphasia.
Occlusion in non dominant hemisphere results in neglect - not being able to recognise your own limbs as your own

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6
Q

Which areas of the cerebrum are supplied by the basilar artery?

What effect would occlusion result in?

A

Brainstem

Occlusion Results in paralysis of all 4 limbs, eye movement abnormalities
Coma is caused by damage to reticular activating system
Locked in Syndrome
Respiratory failure

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7
Q

Which areas of the cerebrum are supplied by the posterior cerebral artery?

What effect would occlusion result in?

A

Visual cortex, thalamus, hippocampus, posterior limb internal capsule
Occlusion Results:
memory deficit - due to hippocampus formation
Contralateral loss of pain and temperature
Visual field defects

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8
Q

What is a watershed infarct?

A

This is when the blood supply to two adjacent cerebral arteries is compromised

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9
Q

Why is stroke more likely to occur in people with atrial fibrilation?

A

Atria is never able to empty properly, so blood left in the atria is able to form clots.
Clots are then pushed through the aorta to the head and stroke occurs

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10
Q

What is a lacunar infarction?

A

These are small infarcts that occur when one of the small arteries deep in the brain becomes blocked when part of its wall deteriorates

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11
Q

How do cells in the penumbra become damaged in stroke?

A

Cells dying in the core region release toxins into the surrounding area and these have the potential to kill the cells in the penumbra

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12
Q

What are the main damage mechanisms that occurs following ischemia?

A
Excitotoxicity 
Reperfusion injury 
Oxidative stress 
Apoptosis 
Inflammation
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13
Q

How does ischemia cause excitotoxicity in stroke?

What other damage mechanisms can excitotoxicity lead to?

A

Hypoxia leads to inadequate ATP, leading to failure of membrane pumps
This causes a release of glutamate at synaptic terminals
Glutamate binds to NMDA receptors and causes rapid calcium ion influx. This triggers the formation of free radicals which can in turn causes necrosis and infalmmation

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14
Q

How does central inflammation occur in stroke?

A

Increased immune cells in the brain activate the BBB
Chemokines lead out of brain and activate the liver
The liver produces chemokines and cytokines which active bone marrow
Bone marrow produces white blood cells e.g, neutrophils
These then infiltrate the BBB and inflammation occurs in the brain

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15
Q

What is a thrombectomy?

What is the timescale for the procedure following stroke?

A

Where you physically remove the blood clot using a mesh device

Must be done within 8 hours of symptoms

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16
Q

What is the name of the surgery carried out in a internal carotid artery following stroke?

A

Endarterectomy

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17
Q

What are the long term drug treatment for stroke

A

Antiplatelet - aspirin/clopidrogrel
Anticoagulant - heparin/warfarin
Statins

18
Q

What are the two main sites of neurogenesis within the adult brain?

A
Subgranular zone of dentate gyrus (SGZ) - within the hippocampus 
Subventricular zone (SVZ) - within the lateral ventricles
19
Q

How does scaring helping in brain repair after stroke?

A

Activated microglia (glial cells) and astrocytes accumulate around the ischemic core to produce a scar within the brain

The scar helps to oscillate the healthy tissue from the injured cavity induced by the stroke

20
Q

How does the immune response alter to become beneficial post stroke?

A

Switch in phenotype from M1 microglia to M2 microglia which are neuroprotective, involved in immune suppression and tissue repair

21
Q

What are the different types of haemorrhage in the brain?

A

Intracerebral
Subarachnoid
Subdural
Extradural

22
Q

What is the most common cause of an intracerebral haemorrhage?

A

Chronic high blood pressure, causing small arteries to weaken and collapse

23
Q

What kind of haemorrhage is a common result of head trauma?

A

Subarachnoid haemorrhage

24
Q

What is a babinski sign?

What kind of motor neuron lesion does it suggest

A

Where you have an abnormal babinski reflex:
Normal: toes crawl down on plantar foot stimulation
Abnormal: toes crawl up on plantar foot stimulation

Babinski sign present (abnormal reflex) suggests an upper motor neruon lesion

25
Q

What is the HPA axis?

A

Hypothalamus - releases cortical releasing hormone (CRH)
Pituitary gland - CRH triggers the release of arenocortitropic hormone (ACTH)
Adrenal gland - ACTH rise triggers a release in cortisol from here

26
Q

Which two important brain structures regulate the HPA axis?

A

Amygdala - triggers the release of CRH from hippocampus in response to fear

Hippocampus - supresses CRH release from hypothalamus when circulating cortisol levels get too high (negative feedback)

27
Q

How is the activity of the Amygdala and Hippocampus altered in anxiety disorders?

A

Amygdala - overactive (increased stress response)

Hippocampus - underactive (due to too excess exposure to high cortisol levels) results in hippocampus neurons to die

28
Q

What is agoraphobia?

A

An episodic anxiety disorder triggered by being away from home, when it is hard to get back

Eg. In a que in a supermarket, or in the middle row of a cinema

29
Q

What are the two operational diagnostic systems used to help diagnose GAD?

A

DSM-5

ICD-10

30
Q

What are the diagnostic criteria for GAD?

A
  • Anxiety symptoms but have been present for 90 or more days out of 180 days (more than not in 6 months)
  • Hard to control anxiety
  • 3 or more symptoms of anxiety
31
Q

Why do SSRIs not work immediately?

A

Blockage of SERT leads to increase serotonin at neuronal cell body
Increased serotonin binds to 5HT-1 autoreceptors present on cell body - this inhibitis neuronal firing
Over time, the 5HT-1 autoreceptors desensitise, which restores the firing of 5H-T

32
Q

What is the structure of the BDZ sensitive GABA A receptor?

Where do GABA and BDZ bind?

A

5 transmembrane subunits arranged around a chloride channel

  • 2 x alpha 1,2,3
  • 2 x beta
  • 1 x gamma 2,3

GABA: binds between alpha and beta (2 molecules per receptor)
BDZ: binds between alpha and gamma

33
Q

What is the structure of the BDZ insensitive GABA A receptors?

What kind of molecules bind and where?

A

5 transmembrane subunits arranged around a chloride channel

  • 2 x alpha 4 or 6
  • 2 x beta
  • 1 x delta/gamma

Alcohol, neurosteroids bind between alpha and delta subunits

34
Q

What are the three main stages to memory?

A

1) encoding
2) storage
3) retrieval

35
Q

What is an acoustic engram?

A

Remembering a piece of information by repeating it to our selves

36
Q

What are the different levels of processing in the levels of processing memory model?

A
Superficial:
- structural: looks like
- phonemic: sounds like
Deep:
- semantic: what it means
37
Q

What is the difference between explicit and implicit memories?

A

Explicit: memories for which we have conscious awareness (we know how it was acquired)
Implicit: memories for which we have knowledge without awareness (e.g, tying your shoelace)

38
Q

What are the two types of declarative (explicit) memory?

A

Semantic - memories for facts

Episodic - memories of events

39
Q

What is procedural memory and is it explicit or implicit?

A

Memory for actions/sills

Implicit (knowledge without awareness)

40
Q

What is the major component of tissue damage that occurs following a reperfusion injury?

A

Inflammatory responses

41
Q

Which molecule will displace diazepam from its receptor binding site?

A

Flumazenil