Stroke Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 3 types of stroke

A

sudden onset
focal - features reflect affected area
cerebral dysfunction
stroke is a neurological emergency

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2
Q

what are the mechanisms of stroke

A

ischaemic - blockage in arterial supply leads to tissue infarction (80%)
intracerebral haemorrhage - direct bleeding into brain parenchyma (20%)
subarachnoid haemorrhage (due to aneurysmal rupture) and cerebral venous thrombosis are two rarer mechanisms

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3
Q

what are the risk factors for stroke

A

ageing
vascular risk factors (hypertension, smoking, diabetes, hypercholesteraemia)
cardiac pathology (atrial fibrillation, valvular disease, defects)

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4
Q

what are the clinical features of an anterior stroke

A

75%
affect hemispheres, subcortical, basal ganglia
leads to cortical deficits such as dysphasia, neglect, visual field defects
can also lead to motor weakness and sensory disturbance
can be partial or total

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5
Q

what are the clinical features of a posterior stroke

A

25%
affect brainstem, cerebellum, occipital lobes
can lead to ataxia, diplopia (double vision) and weakness and sensory distrubance

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6
Q

what is a lacunar stroke

A

subcortical stroke
affects small deep perforating arteries
symptoms are pure motor, sensory or sensorimotor (min. 2 of face, arm, leg) and ataxic hemiparesis

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7
Q

what arteries are affected in an anterior stroke

A

anterior or middle cerebral arteries

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8
Q

what arteries are affected in a posterior stroke

A

posterior cerebral artery, vertebral artery, basilar artery and branches

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9
Q

what is a transient ischaemic attack

A

symptoms and signs of ischaemic stroke but resolve within minutes (within 24hrs by definition)

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10
Q

what does a TIA indicate

A

neurological emergency
elevated risk of ischaemic stroke in next few weeks
gives opportunity to intervene and reduce risk of stroke (screen for risk factors and manage these)

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11
Q

describe hyperacute management of ischaemic stroke

A

possibility to offer reperfusion therapy, but it is time-dependent
thrombolysis (clot-busting medication)
thrombectomy (clot retrieval)
reduces long-term disability risk

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12
Q

hyperacute management of haemorrhagic stroke

A

control BP and coagulation issues

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13
Q

describe secondary prevention for ischaemic stroke

A

give antiplatelet (~300mg aspirin for 2 weeksm then low dose clopidogrel for life)
screen for atrial fibrillation (and treat if present), if carotid artery disease present they may be eligible for surgery (endarterectomy)

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14
Q

secondary prevention in ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke

A

control BP
lower lipids
lifestyle changes - diet, exercise, weight loss, smoking cessation

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15
Q

what supportive management is provided

A

dysphagia (unsafe swallow) - NG or PEG feeding, modified diets, SLT
dysphasia - communication aids, SLT
mobility - rehabilitation (PT, OT)
cognition - supportive strategies
manage any secondary complications such as infection (esp pneumonia)

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