Vascular Flashcards
54 year-old woman developed a headache and rapid-onset of left hemiparesis.
Hypertensive basal ganglia hemorrhage
CT: hemorrhage in R putamen
Intraparenchymal hemorrhagic stroke
-
Chronic HTN → rupture of small arteries
- Unlike stroke which is immediate, progresses over 30-90 mins
- Risk factors:
- HTN
- Aspirin
- Old age
- Cerebral amyloid angiopathy
- Smoking, alcohol, cocaine
- Symptoms
- Decreased consciousness → coma, headache, nausea/vomiting
- Contralateral hemiplegia and sensory deficit (due to mass effect), aphasia, neglect, visual disturbances
- Common sites
- Basal ganglia (putamen)
- Pons
- Cerebellum
- Thalamus
60 year-old man was found down, not moving right side.
Hypertensive basal ganglia hemorrhage → intraventricular extension
CT: large hemorrhage in left thalamus with intraventricular extension
A 65 year-old man collapsed while outside and remained comatose.
Pontine hemorrhage
CT: hemorrhage in the pons
- Usually a devastating and fatal event
- Due to rupture of penetrating vessels from the basilar artery
- Symptoms
- Quadraplegia, rigidity, decerebrate postering
- Comatose with few brainstem reflees
- Pinpoint pupils
- Prognosis
- Patients do not survive
A 56 year-old presented with nausea and vommiting followed by an intense headache and loss of consciousness.
Cerebellar hemorrhage
CT: hemorrhage in cerebellum with extension into 4th ventricle
- Signs and symptoms
- Headache, gait ataxia, vertigo/dizziness, vomiting
- “Fatal gastroenteritis” = nausea/vomiting due to unrecognized cerebellar pathology
- Complications
-
Obstructive hydrocephalus due to occlusion of 4th ventricle = EMERGENCY
- Do frequent neuro checks and imaging
- Monitor respiratory and circulatory status
-
Obstructive hydrocephalus due to occlusion of 4th ventricle = EMERGENCY
- Treatment
- Mannitol, hyperventilation
- Hematomas < 3cm can be monitored clinically and radiographically
- Hematomas > 3cm require surgical evacuation via drainage
4 separate elderly patients with the sudden onset of headache and focal neurological deficits.
Lobar hemorrhage
- Hemorrhages within lobes of brain adjacent to the cortex
- __Most common in parietal and occipital
- Basal ganglia, brainstem, cerebellum are spared
- Epidemiology
- Elderly w/o HTN
- ApoE2 or APE4 allele
- Associated with cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA)
- Abnormal accumulation of amyloid protein in arterioles of the cortex and meninges
- Congo red stain of amyloid protein
- Treatment
- AVOID antiplatelet + anticoagulant
A 76 year-old woman with left sided weakness and neglect (left).
A 68 year-old with visual hallucinations in her left visual field (right).
Hemorrhagic conversion of ischemic stroke
CT: Hemorrhage within R MCA infarct (left)
CT: Hemorrhage withing R PCA infarct (right)
-
Ischemic strokes can convert to hemorrhage after tPA
- Risk of hemorrhage on tPA is 6%
- Risk factors:
- Deviation from tPA protocol
- Large strokes
- Old age
- Hyperglycemia
A 76 year-old woman presented with a headache and deficits in her right visual field.
Hemorrhage into tumor
- Brain tumors often hemorrhage into the nectrotic center of the tumor
- Common bleeding tumors:
- Medulloblastomas
- Oligodendrogliomas
- Craniopharyngiomas
- Vestibular schwannomas
- Ependymomas
- Pituitary adenomas
- Choroid plexus carcinoma
A 46 year-old woman presented a seizure and scan (left) was performed. 4 months later he was found unconscious in bed and scan (right) was performed.
Hemorrhagic metastatic tumor
- Metastatic tumors that bleed:
- Melenoma
- Renal cell carcinoma
- Choriocarcinoma
- Thyroid cancer
- However, lung and breast cancer are more common and therefore most metastatic bleeds are due to these cancers!
- Metastatic vs. primary tumor is hard to tell on imaging
- Cerebellar tumors are mostly metastatic though!
A 61 year-old man developed right-sided leg weakness, urinary incontinence, mutism.
Left ACA infarct
- ACA supplies:
- Medial frontal lobe + anterior parietal lobe
- Corpus callosum
- Cingulate gyrus
- Signs
- Contralateral weakness and sensory loss of legs
- Urinary incontinence - disruption of micturition inhibition center
- Disinhibition, abulia (can’t make deciscions)
- Left side
- Transcortical motor aphasia
- Right side
- Hemineglect
A 67 year-old man developed severe left-sided weakness and neglect.
Right MCA infarct
- Signs
- Contralateral weakness, sensory loss, homonymous hemianopsia
- Eyes deviate to side of the lesion
- Left side
- Global aphasia
- Right side
- Hemineglect
59 year-old man developed sudden-onset of left-sided weakness (left).
65 year-old woman suddenly lost consciousness with left-sided weakness (right).
Dense MCA sign (left)
Dense basilar sign (right)
- Most cases of ischemic stroke will show a normal brain on non-con CT
- Large artery thrombosis can reveal clot of the artery as a hyperdense focality on CT scan
A 76 year-old woman presented with the sudden onset of left-sided weakness and neglect syndrome.
Ischemic stroke of right MCA
- Earliest sign of stroke will show blurring of white-gray matter
- These changes start at 6-12 hours
A 55 year-old man was brought to the hospital by his wife after he “stopped making sense.”
Inferior division MCA stroke
- Supplies posterior frontal lobe + anterior parietal lobe + lateral temporal lobe
- Signs
- Contralateral visual deficit (occipital)
- Contralateral cortical sensory loss (parietal)
- Left
- Wernicke’s (receptive) aphasia
- Right
- Hemineglect
A 79 year-old man presented with trouble seeing and reading…
PCA infarct
- Supplies inferior medial temporal lobe + occipital lobe
- Small penetrating branches supply parts of the midbrain + thalamus
- Signs
-
Contralateral homonymous hemianopsia with macular sparing
- There is collateral supply from the MCA
- Alexia without agraphia (splenium of corpus callosum)
- Sensory deficit (thalamus)
- Upper nerve palsies, vertical gaze impairment, coma (midbrain)
-
Contralateral homonymous hemianopsia with macular sparing
A 59 year-old man was admitted after falling down the stairs. He could not see, but denied any visual complaints.
Bilateral PCA stroke
- Cortical blindness in patients with damage to both occipital lobes
-
Anton’s syndrome = damage to both occipital lobes
- Denial of blindness
-
Balint’s syndrome = damage to both posterior parietal lobes
- Optic ataxia = impairment of hand-eye coordination
- Oculomotor apraxia = can’t guide eye movements
- Simultanagnosia = can’t perceive more than one object at a time in one’s visual field