Stroke Flashcards
Classification?
Stroke
- Ischaemic
- Haemorrhagic (10-20%)
TIA
define TIA
transient neurological deficit secondary to ischaemia, without infarction
- symptoms of stroke resolve fully within 24hrs, however duration is only up to an hr
what is a crescendo TIA?
TIAs often precede a stroke, crescendo TIA is when a person has 2 or more TIAs in a week- high risk of progression to full stroke
Risk factors?
- CVD
- carotid artery disease
- HT
- Diabetes
- hypercoagulable states
- COCP etc
- smoking
- hypercholesterolaemia
- AF
Presentation?
- always suspect vascular cause when SUDDEN ONSET neurological deficit, esp asymmetrical
- symptoms depend on area / artery territory affected
- Anterior cerebral artery: arms & legs affected
- Middle cerebral artery: hands, fingers, face affected
- Posterior cerebral artery: vision affected
- Basilar artery: vertigo, dizziness etc
Ix
- stroke
- TIA
- stroke
- Blood glucose- exclude hypoglycaemia
- Immediate CT brain - rule out primary intracerebral haemorrhage
- TIA
- Blood glucose
- FBC & U&E
- ECG
- Diffusion-weighted MRI - gold standard
- Carotid US
- to see if there is carotid artery stenosis
if there is carotid artery stenosis present, what can be done?
- endarterectomy - removal of plaque
- carotid senting - widening lumen
Mx for stroke
- Admit to specialist stroke centre
- 300mg Aspirin stat. then continue for 2 weeks
- Thrombolysis w/ alteplase
- only given after CT, once haemorrhage excluded
- needs to be given within 4.5hrs
- close monitoring for post thrombolysis complications ie haemorrhage
- Rehabilitation
what aspect needs to be closely monitored during a stroke?
BP must not be lowered in order to ensure perfusion to contralteral side, unless there is malignant hypertension
Mx for TIA
- Start 300mg Aspirin daily
- Start secondary prevention measures for stroke
- ABCD2 score
What are secondary prevention measures?
- Clopidogrel 85mg daily (alternatively dipyridamole twice daily)
- Atorvastatin
- Optimise modifiable risk factors
How does Dipyridamole work?
nucleoside transport inhibitor - prevents clot formation
What is the ABCD2 tool?
A tool used to assess the risk of progression to stroke within the next 48h. Higher score= higher risk.
A- age (>60=1)
B- BP (>140/90=1)
C-Clinical features (unilateral weakness = 2, dysphasia without weakness= 1)
D- Duration (>60mins= 2, 10-60mins = 1, < 10 mins = 0)
D-Diabetes = 1