Stroke Flashcards
ischemic arterial stroke
severity depends on the number of collateral vessels that a patient has
additional collaterals can develop in response to ischemia
penumbra
at risk tissue that is still perfusing but may be damaged
transient ischemic attack
transient focal neurological deficits without stroke presentation on imaging
ischemic stroke symptoms
sudden onset
focal deficits (negative symptoms)
follows vascular territory
ischemic stroke risk factors
prior stroke
male
atrial fibrillation
hypertension
ischemic stroke locations
MCA trunk: very large stroke
MCA inferior: can be confused with psychiatric condition
ACA: contralateral hemiplegia, urinary incontinence, grasp reflex
PCA: harder to diagnose, no weakness, mostly visual
ischemic stroke management
rapid diagnosis
stabilization (ABCs)
thrombolysis or thrombectomy
stroke unit
possible decompressive surgery
investigate mechanism
secondary prevention
rehabilitation
IV thrombolysis (rtPA)
indicated if stroke onset less than 4.5 hours and normal CT
doubles the odds of favorable outcomes at 3 months
in few cases: hemorrhagic transformation
IV thrombolysis absolute contraindications
significant head trauma
active internal bleeding
high blood pressure
hypoglycemia
low platelets
anti-coagulation medication
IV thrombolysis possible contraindications
pregnancy
less than 18 or more than 80 years old
major surgery in the last 14 days
recent stroke
mechanical thrombectomy
complements IV rtPA
works best in proximal vessels
time dependent but can be done later if patients are slow progressors
ischemia pathophysiology
depolarized external membrane
increased intracellular calcium
Is the translation of stroke research from animals to humans successful?
most often no
mechanism of ischemic arterial stroke
arteriopathy
embolic
hematological
diagnostic test for establishing subtype of ischemic stroke
MRI
lipid screen
carotid duplex
ECG
MRI
CT