Stroke Flashcards
Define stroke
Stroke – acute neurological deficit lasting >24hr
Ischaemic (85%) – lack of perfusion due to vessel occlusion or critical stenosis
Haemorrhagic (15%) – bleeding into brain parenchyma due to vessel rupture
What are the causes/risk factors of stroke?
ischaemic • Large artery atherosclerosis e.g. intracranial, carotid, aortic arch • Small vessel disease e.g. lacunar infarcts • Cardioembolic e.g. AF, MI, valve disease • Other e.g. dissection, vasculitis, hypercoagulable states (sickle cell, APL syndrome)
Haemorrhagic • Hypertension • Rupture of aneurysm or AVM • Haemorrhagic necrosis e.g. tumour • Vasculitis
Risk factors Ischaemic • Male • Increasing age • Diabetes • Family history
Haemorrhagic • Male • Increasing age • Hypertension • AVM • Hereditary bleeding disorders
What are the symptoms of stroke?
- Stupor/coma
- Confusion/agitation
- Memory loss
- Seizure
- Delirium
- Diplopia
- Loss of vision
- Poor balance
- Clumsiness
- Difficulty walking
- Slurred speech
- Dysphagia
- Head/neck pain
- Facial droop
- Limb weakness/paralysis
- Loss of sensation
- Hearing loss
- Nausea & vomiting
What are the signs of stroke?
anterior anterior cerebral artery: • Apraxia – inability to perform learned motor tasks • Contralateral weakness (leg > arm) • Contralateral sensory loss • Confusion
middle cerebral artery:
• Apraxia
• Contralateral hemiparesis/hemiplegia (arm > leg)
• Contralateral sensory loss
• Contralateral homonymous hemianopia
• Left hemispheric: receptive or expressive dysphasia
• Right hemispheric: Visual perceptual deficits
including left hemineglect
• Wernicke’s and Brocca’s
Posterior posterior cerebral artery: • Homonymous hemianopia • Visual agnosia • Memory loss • Hemisensory loss • Wernicke's and Brocca's
vertebrobasilar: • Bilateral visual and cranial nerve problems • Vertigo • Dysarthria • Dysphagia • Diplopia • Facial numbness or paraesthesia • Hemiparesis or quadriparesis • Ataxia • Hemi- or bilateral sensory loss
lacunar • Pure sensory deficit • Pure motor deficit • Ataxic hemiparesis • Dysarthria
intracerebral haemorrhage • Headache • Meningism – neck stiffness • Focal neurological signs • N&V • Raised ICP – pain on straining • Seizure
What investigations are carried out for stroke?
• Bloods
- FBC – exclude anaemia
- U&Es – exclude electrolyte imbalances
- Glucose – exclude hypoglycaemia
- Lipids
- Cardiac enzymes – exclude MI
- Clotting profile
• ECG – exclude arrhythmia or ischaemia
• Echocardiogram – identify cardiac thrombus, IE, VSD (bubble contrast study)
• Carotid Doppler –exclude carotid artery disease
• CT head – identify haemorrhagic stroke (hyperdensity)
• MRI brain – high sensitivity for ischaemic stroke
• CT/MRI angiography – identify intra/extracranial occlusion/stenosis
What is the management for stroke?
- Swallowing assessment
- DVT prophylaxis e.g. heparin
- Early mobilisation
MDT rehabilitation
• SALT
• Occupational therapy
• Physiotherapy
Ischaemic stroke hyperacute: • IV thrombolysis e.g. alteplase • Aspirin after 24h acute: • 300mg aspirin or clopidogrel Surgery: • Carotid endarterectomy <2 weeks of stroke or TIA
Intracerebral haemorrhage • BP control • Reduce ICP - IV mannitol - Hyperventilation • Evacuation of haematoma • Ventricular drainage
What are the complications of stroke?
- Cerebral oedema and raised ICP
- Immobility
- Infection e.g. pneumonia, UTI, from pressure sores
- Seizure
- DVT
- Arrhythmia
- MI
- Cardiac failure
- Death