Stroke Flashcards
What type of stroke is more common?
Ischaemic (85%)
Haemorrhagic (15%)
What is the first line and definitive investigations for stroke?
CT to exclude bleeding
Diffusion weighted MRI
What should you rule out before suspecting stroke?
Hypoglycaemia
What is the management of stroke?
Aspirin 300mg post-CT without haemorrhage
<4.5 hours: Alteplase
+ Thrombectomy: if ischaemic + PAC occlusion
How does anatomy dictate thrombectomy time?
<=6 hours: Proximal anterior (ACA/MCA)
6-24 hours: As above but with salvageable tissue
+ Consider if < 24hrs if prox posterior (PCA, basilar)
What entails secondary prevention of stroke?
Clopidogrel 75mg daily
Atorvastatin 80mg if 48hr cholesterol >3.5
Treat cardiac risk factors
Review antipsychotics in elderly
What are the TACS criteria for stroke?
- Unilateral motor +/- sensory loss in limbs
- Homonymous hemianopia
- Slurred speech
How do you identify a partial anterior stroke
2/3 TACS
How does a lacunar stroke present?
Pure sensory stroke
Clumsy hands
Ataxia
Unilateral sensorimotor loss
How does a Posterior circulation stroke differ from anterior circulation?
Homonymous hemianopia can present alone
Loss of consciousness or DANISH symptoms
What is the supply of the following stroke areas
TACS
PACS
LACS
POCS
TACS/PACS: ACA, MCA
LACS: Deep perforating MCA
POCS: Vertebrobasilar arteries
How can you differentiate between an ACA and MCA occlusion?
Lower limb paralysis greater in ACA
Vision and speech more MCA
Wheres the stroke?
Unilateral loss of vision
Retinal, ophthalmic
Wheres the stroke?
Homonymous hemianopia + macular sparing
Visual agnosia
Posterior cerebral artery
Wheres the stroke?
CL weakness
IL down and out eye
PCA branches to midbrain
Weber’s syndrome