Stroke Flashcards

1
Q

What makes up the circle of willis?

A
Anterior cerebral artery ( left and right)
Anterior Communicating artery
Internal carotid artery
Posterior cerebral artery
Posterior communicating artery
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2
Q

What’s the correlation between CBF and BP?

A

Auto-regulation maintains the CBF at constant level of 50ml/100g of brain between mean arterial BP of 50-250mm HG

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3
Q

Which artery, Internal or external carotid artery supplies the brain?

Which artery supplies the anterior and posterior flow?

A

Internal

Anterior flow is supplied via iCAs (left and right branch), posterior flow is supplied through vertebral arteries which fuse to form the basilar artery

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4
Q

What is oligaemia?

A

Results from reduced perfusion or CBF over prolonged period; tissue which might be saved.

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5
Q

List the oxford classification of stroke and its presentations

A
  1. Total anterior circulation stroke:
    3 of 3 of the following
    - unilateral weakness (and/or sensory deficit) of face, arm, leg
    - homonymous heminopia
    - higher cerebral dysfuction (dysphagia, visuospatial)
  2. Partial ant. circulation
    2 of 3 of TACS
3. Lacunar syndrome
1of following:
- pure sensory stroke
- pure motor stroke
- Sensori-motor stroke (one-sided)
- ataxic hemiparesis: weakness and clumsiness, on the ipsilateral side of the body
  1. Posterior circulation syndrome:
    1 of following:
    - Cranial nerve palsy + contralateral motor/sensory deficit
    - Bilateral motor/sensory deficit
    - Conjugate eye movement disorder
    - Cerebellar dysfunction
    - isolated homonymous hemianopia or cortical blindness
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6
Q

Causes of stroke?

A

80% = ischaemic

  • 50% atherosclerosis thromboembolism of arteries
  • 20% emboli from circulation of heart: Af > MI, aneurysm, RHD, prosthetic valve
  • Lacunar infarcts (large or small arteries
  • Rare cause - vasculitidies, bacterial, arterial dissection

20% = haemorrhage
- extradural: The source of bleeding is typically from a torn meningeal artery, usually the middle meningeal artery (75%). But can also be caused by venous extradural hemorrhage.
- Subarachnoid: normally see bleeding at CoW area
- Subdural: The classic appearance of an acute subdural hematoma is a crescent-shaped homogeneously hyperdense extra-axial collection that spreads diffusely over the affected hemisphere.
Causes include hypertension, aneurysms, angiopathy

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7
Q

what are the risk factors for stroke?

A
Age
male
Asian, african
FHx
PMHx
Vascular disease (HTN, DM, dyslipidemia)
AF
Smoking
Diet
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8
Q

List the glasgow coma scale

A

Eye -

4: spontaneous
3: Verbal
2: Pain
1: none

Verbal -

5: oriented
4: confused
3: inappropriate
2: Incomprehensible
1: nothing

Movement -

6: obeys command
5: move to pain
4: away from pain
3: decorticate flexion
2: Decerebrate - extension
1: nothing

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9
Q

Haemorrhagic and ishchemic stroke visibility on CT scans

A

most of the time you can only see haemorrhagic stroke immediately o CT

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10
Q

When do we use MRI instead of CT?

A

Used in patients with more complex symptoms, where extent or location of stroke is unknown.
MRI diffusion weighted imaging is the best <1hour
PET/SPECT <1 hour

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11
Q

What are the 2 major forms of CVD leading to stroke (list the type of infarct they cause)?

A
  1. Large vessel, cardiac embolic events: Atherosclerosis, plaque rupture, thrombotic occlusion etc -> large cortical and subcortical infarcts
  2. Small vessel disease: Arteriolosclerosis, fibrinoid necrosis (tissue death involving formation of fibrin associated with vasculitis and transplant rejection), micro-aneurysm, cerebral amyloid angiopathy (amyloid forms on blood vessels in brain) -> small subcortical infarcts (deep micro-bleeds, lacuna infarcts) and diffuse white matter lesion
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12
Q

What are the pathophysiological features of small vessel disease?

A
- Loss of smooth mischle and media (arteriolosclerosis)
Thickineing of intima
Obliteration and occlusion
BBB changes
Increased resistance
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13
Q

List 3 small vessels that cen cause SVD infarcts

A
  1. lateral lenticulostriate arteries
  2. Medial lenticulostrate arteries
  3. Heubner arteries
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14
Q

List 3 main disease caused by global cerebral ischaemia

A
  1. White matter infarcts: silent infarcts that increase risk of stroke
  2. Laminar necrosis: Uncontrolled death of cells in cortex in a bond like pattern with presentation of cells immediately adjacent to meninges
  3. Watershed infarcts: Infarct in borderline zones of PCA, MCA, ACA that supply tissues as that is where blood supply decreased)
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15
Q

What are the cellular changes that takes place in cerebral infarction?

A
  1. Pyknotic neurones: Irreversible condensation of chromatin in nucleus of cells undergoing necrosis/ apoptosis
  2. Peri-infarct gliosis: Non-specific reactive changes of glial cells in response to CNS damage
    It involves proliferation/ hypertrophy of different types of glial cells (astrocytes, microglial, oligodendrocytes) sometimes forming glial scar
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16
Q

What happens to the following in Global ischaemia and hypoxaemia?

  1. Electrical failure
  2. Decrease in ADP/ATP
  3. Increase in Lactate
  4. fatty acid and protein catabolism
  5. Tissue pathology
  6. Clinical context (cause)
A

Global ischaemia : Hypoxaemia

    • : +
  1. +++ : +
  2. +++ : +
  3. Yes : No
  4. Selective necrosis/infarction : Synaptic changes
  5. Cardiac arrest, arrhythmia, hypotension (older) : Anaphylaxis, asthma, bronchitis, bronchiolitis
17
Q

Describe the pathogenesis of brain to neuronal injury - damage of brain

A

Word document

18
Q

How do we manage acute stroke?

A
Primary prevention:
CT
Thrombyolutics (alteplase)
Antiplatelet (aspirin)
lowering BP
neuroprotection - NMDA, AMPA
Secondary prevention:
Antiplatelet - aspirin, clopidegrol
Anticoagulants: wafarin in AF, heparin
lowering BP _ CCB
Cholesterol lowering - Statin
Carotid endarterectomy
angioplasty