Stroke Assessment - Helms Flashcards
Define stroke (in the broadest sense)
A sudden failure of brain function due to diminished blood flow to a part of the brain, or de to bleeding inside the brain
Give the two major mechanisms of stoke
What are the 3 P’s discussed that drive stroke occurrance?
Thrombotic and Embolic
Pump (heart), Pipes (vessels), Passengers (blood components)
Cardioembolism accounts for about what percentage of strokes?
What two defects or pathological processes does it generally include?
What areas of brain vessels are generally affected? Which major vessel is usualy implicated?
20-30%
Atrial fibrillation and valvular defects
MCA is the most common site, with strokes either affecting large vessels, or end branches along the grey-white border
What is the pattern of hypoperfusive damage for:
Low flow
Complete blockage of flow
Low flow: watershed injury
No flow: cortical laminar necrosis
Give 3 patterns of large vessel disease often implicated in stroke
Carotid plaque
Vertebral artery stenosis
Intracranial stenosis
What is an artery-to-artery embolism?
Rupture of a plaque in an upstream vessel then travels downstream to occlude another (probably smaller) vessel
Name 5 areas of the brain especially vulnerable to lacunes and hemorrhages
- Basal ganglia
- Pons
- Thalamus
- Certrum semiovale
- Cerebellum
Where in vessels do aneurysms usually occur?
Are these common or rare?
At bifurcation sites
Rare
Describe the presentation of ateriovenous malformation
Highly variable
- Hemorrhage
- Focal neurological symptoms
- Seizures
- Headaches
- Or nothing (asymptomatic)!