Stroke Flashcards

1
Q

Define stroke

A

Rapidly developing clinical signs of focal (or global) disturbance of cerebral function + lasting > 24 hrs

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2
Q

What are the 3 main aetiological causes of stroke caused by ischaemia?

A

Thrombosis: MCA branch point, ICA bifurcation
Emboli: AF, rheumatic heart disease
Hypoperfusion

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3
Q

Give the incidence of each type of stroke

A

Ischaemic 85%
Intracerebral Haemorrhage 10%
SAH 5%

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4
Q

What might cause an emboli leading to stroke caused by ischaemia?

A

Carotid atherosclerotic plaque breaking off
Atheromatous plaques from heart (ie. AF)
Break off of intima from carotid dissection.
Rarely: venous emboli which passes through the ASD/ VSD

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5
Q

How can hypotension lead to a stroke caused by ischaemia?

A

If BP below autoregulatory range required to maintain cerebral blood flow, leads to ischaemia in the watershed zones between different cerebral artery territories

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6
Q

List 2 less common causes of stroke caused by ischaemia

A

Cocaine

Vasculitis

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7
Q

What are the 3 main causes of haemorrhagic stroke?

A

HTN
Cerebral Amyloid angiopathy
Arteriovenous malformations

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8
Q

List 3 less common causes of haemorrhagic stroke?

A

Trauma
Tumours
Vasculitis

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9
Q

Summarise the epidemiology of stroke

A

COMMON
Largest cause of disability
3rd most common cause of death in UK
Usual age of stroke patients: 70+

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10
Q

List 6 presenting symptoms of stroke

A

SUDDEN-ONSET
Weakness
Sensory, visual or cognitive impairment
Impaired coordination
Impaired consciousness
Head or neck pain (carotid/ vertebral artery dissection)

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11
Q

In a potential stroke patient what do you enquire about?

A

Time of onset (for emergency Mx if < 4.5h)

Hx of AF, MI, valvular heart disease, carotid artery stenosis, recent neck trauma or pain

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12
Q

What do you look for in a potential stroke patient?

A

Signs of the underlying cause e.g. AF

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13
Q

Describe the signs seen in lacunar infarct strokes affecting the internal capsule or pons, the thalamus and the basal ganglia

A

Internal capsule/ pons: pure sensory/ motor deficit (or both)
Thalamus: loss of consciousness, hemisensory deficit
Basal ganglia: hemichorea, hemiballismus, parkinsonism

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14
Q

Describe 2 signs seen in anterior cerebral artery ischaemic strokes

A

Lower limb weakness

Confusion

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15
Q

Describe the signs seen in middle cerebral artery ischaemic strokes

A

Facial weakness
Hemiparesis (motor cortex)
Hemisensory loss (sensory cortex)
Apraxia
Hemineglect (parietal lobe)
Receptive or expressive dysphasia (involvement of Wernicke’s + Broca’s areas)
Quadrantopia (if superior or inferior optic radiations are affected)

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16
Q

Describe a sign seen in posterior cerebral artery ischaemic strokes

A

Hemianopia

17
Q

Describe 6 signs seen in Posterior Inferior Cerebellar artery ischaemic stroke. In which syndrome is this artery affected?

A
Vertigo
Ipsilateral ataxia
Ipsilateral Horner's syndrome
Ipsilateral hemisensory loss
Dysarthria
Contralateral spinothalamic sensory loss
Lateral medullary syndrome
18
Q

Describe 4 signs seen in anterior inferior cerebellar ischaemic strokes

A

Vertigo
Ipsilateral ataxia
Ipsilateral deafness
Ipsilateral facial weakness

19
Q

Describe 2 signs seen in basilar artery ischaemic strokes

A

Cranial nerve pathology

Impaired consciousness

20
Q

List 5 signs that are seen in multiple lacunar infarct strokes

A
Vascular dementia
Urinary incontinence
Gait apraxia
Shuffling gait
Normal or excessive arm-swing
21
Q

Describe 6 signs seen in intracerebral haemorrhage strokes

A
Headache
Meningism
Focal neurological signs
N+V
Signs of raised ICP
Seizures
22
Q

What non-imaging investigations do you perform in suspected stroke?

A

Bloods: FBC. UE, glucose, lipid profile. Clotting profile - check if thrombophilia (esp. in young patients)
ECG: to detect arrhythmias which predispose to emboli

23
Q

What 5 imaging investigations can you perform in suspected stroke?

A

Echo: to see cardiac emboli / endocarditis
Doppler carotid US: to exclude carotid artery disease
CT Head: Rapid detection of haemorrhages
MRI-Brain: Higher sensitivity for infarction but less available
CT Cerebral Angiogram: Detect dissections or intracranial stenosis

24
Q

Describe the management plan for hyperacute stroke

A
If < 4.5h from onset  
Exclude haemorrhage using CT-head   
Thrombolysis IV
No aspirin for 24h
Monitor on GCS
25
Q

Describe the management plan for acute ischaemic stroke

A

Aspirin + Clopidogrel to prevent further thrombosis (once haemorrhage excluded on CT head)
Heparin anticoagulation considered if a high risk of emboli recurrence or stroke progression
Swallow assessment (NG tube may be needed)
GCS monitoring
Thromboprophylaxis

26
Q

Describe the secondary prevention plan for stroke

A

Aspirin + dipyridamole
Warfarin anticoagulation (AF)
Control risk factors: HTN, hyperlipidaemia, treat carotid artery disease, smoking

27
Q

What surgical treatment option is available for stroke?

A

Carotid endarterectomy

28
Q

Describe the management plan for intracerebral haemorrhagic stroke

A

IV mannitol to reduce ICP
Control HTN + seizures
Hyperventilation lowers ICP
Evacuation of haematoma may be required

29
Q

List 6 potential complications of stroke

A
Cerebral oedema (increased ICP) 
Immobility  
Infections  
DVT  
Cardiovascular events  
Death
30
Q

Describe the prognosis of a stroke patient

A

10% mortality in first month
50% of survivors become dependent
10% recurrence within 1 year

31
Q

Which type of stroke has a worse prognosis?

A

Haemorrhagic

32
Q

How does a stroke differ to a TIA?

A

TIA Sx are similar to stroke but last < 24h.
Due to a temporary lack of blood to a part of the brain. Mostly caused by tiny blood clots
Affected part of brain is without O2 for just a few minutes + soon recovers as the clot either breaks up quickly or nearby blood vessels are able to compensate.