SAH Flashcards

1
Q

def SAH

A

arterial haemorrhage into the subarachnoid space, spontaneous

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2
Q

aetiology fo SAH

A

rupture of saccular (berry aneurysm) haemorrhage at the base of the brain - usually at the circle of willis - 85% - at junction of posterior communicating artery with tyhe internal carotid, or anterior communicating with anterior cerebral, or bifercation of the middle cerebral

perimesencephalic haemorrhage - eg parenchymal haemorrhages tracking onto the surface of the brain - 10%

arteriovenous malformations, bleeding diatheses, vertebral or carotid artery dissection with intracranial extension, mycotic aneurysms, drug abuse (eg cocaine, amphetamine) 5%

encephalitis, vasculitis, tumour invading bv, idiopathic

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3
Q

associations with SAH

A

previous aneurysmal SAH - new form, old get bigger

HTN,

smoking,

excess alcohol intake

saccular aneurysms associated with polycystic kidney disease

Marfan’s syndrome

pseudoxanthoma elasticum

ehlers-danlos - associated berry aneurysm

bleeding disorders

SBE - mycotic aneurysm

FH - 3-5x increased risk in close relatives

aortic coarctation - associated with berry aneurysm

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4
Q

epi SAH

A

annual incidence 10 in 100000

50yrs

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5
Q

sx of SAH

A

sudden onset of severe headache - classically described as if been hit on the back of the head, thunderclap

nausea

vomiting

neck stiffness

photophobia

reduced consciousness - coma/drowsiness may last for days

seizure

warning ‘sentinal’ headache - perhaps due to small warning leak from aneurusm (6%)

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6
Q

signs of SAH

A

meningism

  • neck stiffness and Kernig’s sign (takes 6hr to develop) - resistance or pain on knee extension when hip flexed
  • because of irritation of meninges by blood
  • pyrexia may occur

GCS - assess and regularly monitor for deterioration

increased ICP

  • papilloedema
  • CN 3 or 4 palsy
  • htn
  • bradycardia

fundoscopy

  • rarely subhyaloid haemorrhage - between retina and viteous membrane
  • Terson’s syndrome: retinal, subhyaloid and vitreous bleed = 5x increased mortality

focal neurological

  • develop on second day and are caused by ischemia from vasospasm and reduced brain function
  • aneurysms may cause pressure on cranial nerves = ophthalmoplegia - CN3 or 6 palsy
  • at presentation may suggest intracerebral haematoma or site of aneurysm eg pupil change - CN3 palsy with posterior communicating aneurysm
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7
Q

Ix for SAH

A

blood

  • FBC
  • UE
  • ESR/CRP
  • clotting ?bleeding diathesis

urgent CT scan

  • hyperdense regions in the basal regions of the skull (caused by blood in the subarachnoid space)
  • identify intraparenchymal or intraventricular haemorrhages
  • detects >95% in 1st 24hrs

angiography (CT or intra-arterial) - detect the source of bleeding if candidate for surgery or endovascular treatment

LP

  • if CT -ve but history suggestive, and no CI
  • >12hr after onset - allow breakdown RBC
  • high opening pressure
  • high red cells
  • few white cells
  • xanthochromia (straw coloured CSF) because of breakdown of Hb - confirmed by spectrophotometry of CSF supernatant after centrifugation.
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