Subarachnoid Haemorrhage Flashcards

1
Q

Causes of SAH:

A

TRAUMATIC (most common)

NON-TRAUMATIC
- Aneurysm (85%)
–> 90% berry
- Perimesencephalic (10%)
- Other:
–> AVM, stimulants, vasculitis, dissection, CVT, bleeding diatheses, tumours….

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2
Q

SAH risk factors:

A

MODIFIABLE
- SMOKING
- ETOH
- Stimulants
- HTN

NONMODIFIABLE
- Personal Hx
- FHx aneurysmal SAH (1st degree)
- CT disorders incl polycystic kidneys
- Sickle cell
- Female
- >50

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3
Q

What is perimesencephalic SAH?

A

Blood collects in the basal cisterns anterior to midbrain

**NO ANEURYSM- CTA will be normal.
Source of bleed not clear: possible venous, or small basilar.

Benign, prognosis good.

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4
Q

What is a Sentinal Headache? How should it be worked up?

A

Small leak that occurs in hours/ days before a major SAH bleed.

50% will have

More subtle than thunderclap, but is usually more severe, or different to usual headaches.

Therefore first or worst headache: think ?impending SAH.
–> CT +/- LP

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5
Q

SYMPTOMS of SAH:

A
  • Thunderclap headache 95%
  • Nausea/ vomiting 75%
  • Syncope 60%
  • Sentinel headache 50%
  • Neck pain/ stiffness
  • Diplopia
    –> CN III from growing PCOM
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6
Q

EXAMINATION in SAH:

A
  • Low grade fever
  • ALOC
  • Meningismus 75%
    –> delayed
  • Focal neuro
    –> 3rd nerve palsy (PCOM)
    –> Leg weakness (ACOM)
  • Intraocular haemorrhage
    –> Vitreous
    –> Retinal
    –> Papilloedema
  • ECG changes
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7
Q

ECG in SAH:

A

Raised ICP changes:
- Bradycardia (Cushings)
- Prolonged QT
- Hyperacute OR Cerebral’ T waves (deeply inverted)
- STE or STD

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8
Q

DDx for thunderclap headache:

A

VASCULAR:
-Reversible Cerebral Vasoconstriction Syndrome (RCVS)
- CVT
- Dissection
–> Carotid, vertebral, basilar
- Pituitary apoplexy
- Tumour haemorrhage
- GCA
- HTN crisis (PRES)
- Acute hydrocephalus
- Idiopathic thunderclap (40%)

OTHER HEADACHE:
- Migraine
- Cluster

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9
Q

Most common site of aneurysm in SAH:

A

PCOM 40%
ACOM 35%
MCA 20%
Posterior/vertebrobasilar 5%

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10
Q

Fisher Grading:

A

On imaging (CT)
About vasospasm

I- NO blood
II- Thin, diffuse, <1mm thick
III- Clots, >1mm thick
IV- With intraventricular or intraparenchymal

GRADES 3 and 4 = vasopasm

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11
Q

World Federation of Neurological Surgeons (WFNS) Grading:

A

Is clinical
About survival

I GCS 15
GCS <=14
–> II no neuro
–> III neuro
III GCS <=12
IV GCS <=7

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12
Q

Describe sensitivity over time of non-con CT in SAH:

A

< 6 hours
= About 100%

< 12 hours
= 98%

< 24 hours
= 93%

____________
Sensitivity less for:
- Small bleeds
- Low HCT (<27%)

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13
Q

Where is blood seen on CT in SAH?

A

Basal cisterns –> sulci –> intraventricular –> parenchyma

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14
Q

Describe the utility of CTA in SAH:

A

ONLY once SAH diagnosed- as work up for cause.

= incidentalomas +++ (2.5% of population)

98% sensitive
Will not see anuerysms <3mm

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15
Q

Describe the utility of angiography in SAH:

A

Gold standard
Intervention at same time

BUT:
Less available
Less practical
2% complication rate

Used if CTA neg but still suspicious of aneurysm.

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16
Q

Lumbar puncture in SAH: utility and interpretation

A

Indication:
- Negative CT outside 6 hours
- Negative CT any time but SAH still suspected
AND
- No evidence of raised ICP or mass on CT

Delay LP until 6 - 12 hours to allow breakdown products to occur

Xanthochromia
–> Should be spectro

Red cells <2000 in LAST tube

(95% sensitive)

17
Q

How long does xanthrochromia hang around for?

A

2 weeks

18
Q

Can an early CTB rule out SAH?

A

Yes.

If thin, multi-slice, within 6 hours, read by radiologist.

….and no specific ongoing suspicion.

19
Q

Early complications of SAH:

A

Rebleed
–>15% will, within hours
–> Terrible prognosis, 60% mortality

Vasospasm
–> 20%, Fisher 3,4
Global ischaemia
–> From raised ICP, low CPP
Hydrocephalus
Seizure
Hyponatraemia
–> Cerebral salt-wasting
–> SIADH

Neurogenic APO

Arrythmia
Cardiogenic shock

20
Q

Management of SAH:

A
  • Usual resus/ neuroprotective

TRAUMATIC: nil special. +- anticonvulsant.

SPONTANEOUS: locate aneurysm with angio, intervene, antoconvulsant, antispasmodic.

———————

  • Bedrest, no exertion, no valsalva
  • BP <140/90
  • Nimodipine 60mg 4-hourly
    –> Non-traumatic ONLY
  • Tx specific complications:
    –> Hydrocephalus
    –> APO
    –> Arrhythmia
    –> HypoNa
  • Neurointervention
    –> Coil/ clip

…..monitor for deterioration = spasm/rebleed.

_________________

CONTROVERSIES
- Seizure prophylaxis
- TXA
- Steroid

21
Q

Sensitivity of LP in SAH:

A

If correctly done >12 hours to look for xanthochromia (within 10 days)-
95%