Neuro: Strokes
Terms
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- Thrombus
- formation of a blood clot within a blood vessel
- Embolism
- object migreate from one part of the body and causes a blockage of a blood vessel in another part of the body
- Facts/Stats about strokes
-
-3rd leading cause of death in U.S.
-1 occurs every 53 seconds in U.S.
-1 death from stroke occurs every 3.3 min
-28% who suffer stroke are <65 yo
-1/3 of people with stroke die
-15-30% of stroke survivers are permanently disabled - Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA)
- -stroke signs and sx which completely resolve within 24 hours with no residual effect
- Infarct
-
-necrosis of tissue due to upstream obstruction of its arterial blood supply
-it is the culmination of ischemia - Ischemia
- -restriction in blood supply, generally due to factors in the blood vessels that result in damage or dysfunction of tissue
- TIA: CT or MRI
- -no visible abnormalities on CT or MRI
- Reversible Ischemic Neurologic Deficit (RIND)
-
-Similar to TIA but signs and syx last >24 hours, thenr resolve no residual effect
-outdated term (now condidered a small stoke) - RIND: CT or MRI
- -no visible abnormalities on CT or MRI
- Stroke (Cerebrovascular Accident, CVA)
- -sudden and rapid onset of a neurologic deficit that fits a vascular territory and is due to an underlying cerebrovascular disease
- 2 types of stroke
-
1. strokes due to infarction
2. strokes due to hemorrhage - Strokes to do infarction (ischemia)
-
-account for 80+% of strokes seen today
-many have TIAs before stroke or at time of stroke - Athero-Thrombotic Ischemic Stroke
-
-caused by blood clot in an artery leading to the brain
-larger sized strokes
-usually from thrombus (clot) in an atherosclerotic plaque
-2/3 are extracranial stenosis with an ulcerative plaque in the carotid artery
-1/3 are extracranial stenosis with an ulcerative plaque in the basilar artery
-average age 70 yo - Embolic Ischemic Stroke
- -smaller size strokes caused by an embolus that moves to progressively smaller arterial branches until it gets stuck
- Emboli may come from...
-
-arthersclerotic plaque
-heart valve vegetation
-mural thrombus
-atrial myxoma
-other - Lacunar Ischemic Stroke
-
-due to occulsive disease of small penetrating arterioles
-usually seen in diabetic or hypertensive pts, but may be in previously healthy persons
-produce small (< 5mm diameter)lesions - Lacunar Ischemic Stroke is most commonly seen where?
- -Most commonly seen in deep white matter of the brain in areas such as the basal ganglia, pons, cerecellum, internal capsule, etc
- Lacunar Ischemic Stroke Prognosis
-
-Prognosis is good
-Most have partial or complete recovery in 4-6 weeks
-but cummultive lacunar infarcts eventually result in dementia if brain tissue is detroyed
-damage is not as big, but long term is harder to fix since it is due to a small vessel disease - Vasculitic Infarct Stroke
-
-Arteritis-type illness
-inflammation of blood vessels
-may involve intracerebral arteries
-causing arterial spasms and edema that leads to brain ischemia - Hematological-Related Infarct Stroke
- -sickle cell anemia, polycythemic and hyperviscosity syndromes may lead to occlusion of intercerebral arteries
- Subclavian Steal Syndrome
-
-retrograde (reversed) arterial flow in the vertebral artery
-compensatory action due to compromised vascular territory beyond the subclavian stenosis/occluded
-extremeties "steal" blood away from other side of the body through the vertebal artery - Strokes associated with Hypercoagulable States
-
-persons with hypercoagulable states form clots easier and clot can eventually cut off blood supply
-also pts with C/S deficiency, hyperfibrinogenemia - Strokes due to hypoglycemia
-
-blood sugar drops and brain is particularly sensitive to needing glucose, so brain cells are the first to die d/t lack of glucose
-tends to be large strokes with residual problems such as dementia - Strokes due to Anoxia
-
-brain is first to die from lack of oxygen
-e.g. drowning - Strokes due to prolonged hypotension
-
-BP drops so dec oxygen and glucose to brain
-watershed attack - Watershed areas
- -areas between vessels that get a little blood from the right and a little blood from the left. If BP decreases of there is an occulsion somewhere, then blood flow to these peripheral areas is lessened
- Strokes due to hemmorrhage
-
-<20% of strokes seen today
-hemorrhagic strokes are NOT associated with TIAs
-area of bleeding is not letting new blood get pastbc it is all bleeding out, so body beyond the hemorrhage is not getting adequate oxygen and glucose - Catergorizing of Cerebral Hemorrhages
-
-intracerebral hemorrhage (primary and secondary)
-subarachnoid hemorrhage - Primary Intracerebral hemorrhage
-
-d/t weak artery that spontaneously bleeds
-most common in hypertensive and diabetic pts - Primary Intracerebral Hemorrhage ususally occurs in..
-
deep brain:
-basal gaglia
-pons "pontine hemorrhage"
-cerebellum - Primary Intracerebral Hemorrage in the Cerebellum
-
-neurosurgical emergency
-presents as dizzy spells, coordination problem, nystagmus, ataxia
-if not surgucally treated, edema and hemorrhage may obstruct the outflow of CSF, leading to increased ICP and tonsillar or uncal herniation - Secondary Intracerebeal Hemorrhage
-
-d/t identifiable causes such as anticoagulation, aneurysm, AVM, hemophila, tumor etc
-suspect hemorrhage is noted in an unusual location - Aneurysm
- -muscular wall is weak, gets stretch out and balloons out, can break and lead to hemorrhage
- aneursym Tx
- -can be surgically clipped or excised
- AVM
-
-arteriovenous malformations
-most lesions are congenital
-bleeding or sx commonly onset bwn 10-30 y/o
-no heretary component
-may remain clinical silent for life - AVMs Tx
- -can be surgically resected
- Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
- -hemorrhage into the ventricles and subarachnoid spaces where CSF circulates
- Subarachnoid Hemmorrhage is often due to..
- -ruptured berry aneurysm in the area of the Circle of Willis
- Berry Aneurysm
-
-small outpouching that looks like a berry; dilations of an intracranial artery
-most occur at anterior part of circle of willis especially at arterial bifurcations
-most remain assymptomatic throughout life
-often multiple
-associated with polycystic kidney disease and coarctation of the aorta - Subarachnoid Hemmorrhage signs and sx
-
-sudden onset of a very severe HA
-signs of meningeal irriation (meningismus)
-"the worst HA I ever had" along with a stiff neck
-must R/O meningitis - Obstrcutive Hydrocephalus
-
-complication from subarachnoid hemorrhage
-d/t CSF ouflow obstruction from the blood
-usually occurs ~2+ weeks after subarachnoid hemorrhage - Subarachnoid prognosis
-
-may progress to coma and death
-extremely poor prognosis when hemorrhage into cerebral ventricles - Work up: to determine the site and extent of brain injury
-
1. CT scan
2. MRI scan - Stroke: CT Scan
-
-best for acute hemorrhage stroke
-appears white on CT-brain window
-misses acute infarct (appears dark on CT-brain window) - Stroke: MRI Scan
-
-best for acute infarct (appears dark on T1, white on T2)
-may miss acute hemorrhage (appears white on T1, whiter on T2) - Work up: Routine Studies for Stroke Patient
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-CBC (R/O infection, check RBC counts)
-chemistry panel
-lipid panel (check cholesteral, see if they are set-up for stroke)
-sed rate (R/O vasculitis, other autoimmune dz)
-CXR (chest xray for heart size)
-PT/PTT (check clotting time) - Work up: Determine the source of embolism
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1. ECG
2. Duplex (Ultrasound) Scan of Carotid Arteries
3. Echocardiogram (transesophageal echo is the most sensitive)
4. MR Angiography (MRA) or CT-Angiography (CTA)
5. Cerebral Arteriogram - ECG
- -look for atrial fibrilation (causes stasis of blood in atria with clot formation)
- Duplex Ultrasound Scan of Carotid Arteries
- -look for thrombus and plaque
- Echocardiogram
- -look for mural (wall) thrombus in heart, valve vegetation, atrial myxoma
- MR-Angiography (MRA) or CT-Angiography (CTA)
-
-be sure to order both an intra-cerebral and extra-cerebral scan
-no contrast dye required for MR-Angiography - Cerebral Arteriogram
-
-used to confirm MRA & Duplex findings
-gold standard for imaging the cerebral cirulation, but carries risks
-contrast dye is injeced into cranial arteries via a catheter introduced in the groin
-surgeons ususally require before doing surgery - Selective arteriogram
- -only certain intrcranial arteries are injected with contrast
- Complete arteriogram
- -both vertebrals and both carotids are injected with contrast
- If vasculitis is suspected...
-
-erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR, Sed, Rate)
-anti-nuclear antibody (ANA)
-Lupus Analyzer Profile
-Cerebral agiogram demonstrates arteries that look like "linked sausages" - If hypercoagulability is suspected...
-
-protein-C
-protein-S
-Lupus anticoagulant
-cardiolipin antibody
-antithrombin
-leyden factor V (in young female athletes) - Treatment of Acute Stoke of the Infart Type
-
1. Intravenous thombolytic Therapy
2. Anticoagulant Therapy for Ischemic Stroke
3. manage increased intracranial pressure, if indicated
4. Supportive Care
5. Post Stroke rehab
6. Surgical Treatment - Intravenous Thrombolytic Therapy for Ischemic strokes
-
-"clot busters"
-thomboltyics dissolve existing clots
-tPA is only thrombolytic currently approved for use in infarct stroke
-not particularly effective for stroke
-significant side effects - Admin of Thrombolytics
-
-admin within 3 hours of stroke onset (after that, clot is mature and cells beyond clot that have not been getting any blood are dead by now)
-admin via catheter directly into area of clot - Risks of Thombolytics
-
-10% risk of intracranial hemorrhage (and half of these are lethal)
(bc it decreases clotting ability so increases bleeding - pts essentially get 2 strokes: 1st is the ischemic stroke they presented with and 2nd is a hemorrhagic stroke from the new bleed d/t drugs)
-no benefit is noted if given 24 hrs after onset - Anticoagulant Therapy for ischemic Strokes
-
-IV heparin or PO warfarin (Coumadin)
-cannot be used until hemorragic stroke is R/O by CT
-may help to limit or halt spread of a thrombotic stroke, but are of NO help for completed strokes (except if there is ongoing source of emboli), ie they prevent clot from getting worse but don't really dissolve the clot - Risks of Anticoagulant therapy
- -sometimes an infart stroke is converted into a hemorrhagic stroke d/t use of these agents
- Onset of Anticoagularnt therapy
-
-IV herparin: immediately
-Coumadin: couple of days to work; involves subatances in the clotting cascade so it doesn't work until stores of these chemicals are used up by the body - Carotid Artery Surgical Tx
-
->65% stenosis or <2mm residual vessel lumen indicated surgery ("critical" stenosis)
-Ulcerated or hemorrhagic plaque with <65% stenosis indicates surgery - Thombectomy
- when vessel is blocked >65%
- Not amenable to surgical treatment:
-
-vertebral arteries and basilar artery are not accessable, except by means of special instrumentation
-lacunar (small vessel disease) infarcts deep in brain
-embolic type strokes - Surgical Prophylaxis
- -carotid endarterectomy (removing occlusive artherosclerotic plaque)
- Surgical prophlaxis vs medical propphylaxis
-
-recent studies show surigcal is superior to medical
- but surgical is higher cost - Stoke Prophylaxis
-
-anti-platelet agents
-Anticoagulants
-cholesteral-lowering agents - Antiplatelet agents
-
-ASA
-Dipyridamole (persantine)
-Ticlopidine (Ticlid)
-Clopidogrel (Plavix) - Acetosalycilic Acid (ASA)
- -cyclooxygenase inhibitor that inhibits platelet aggregation by preventing formation of thomboxane A2
- ASA uses
-
-low dose ASA works well for CV disease prevention
-does NOT work as well for stroke prevention
-shown to prevent strokes in males - Unbuffered vs Buffered
-
Unbuffered: Bayer
Buffered: Ascriptin, Bufferin - Dipyridamole (Persantine)
- -cyclooxygenase inhibits that inhibits platelet aggregation by inhibiting the uptake of adensoine and as a weak phosphodiesterase inhibitor
- Aggrenox
-
-extended release capsule that is a combination of Dipyridamole and Aspirin
-twice as effective as ASA alone
-BUT more expensive! - Ticlopidine (Ticlid)
-
-30% more effective than ASA
-but more expensive
-can cause neutropenia and thrombocytopenia so must monitor WBC count
-use for pts who can't tolerate other meds
-250 mg PO bid c food - Clopidogrel (Plavix)
-
-50% better than ASA without SE of ASA
-safer than Ticlopidine & same cost
-use for pts who are allergic to, or can't tolerate ASA
-75 mg qd - Other Pharm agents for Stroke
-
-ACE inhibitors
-angiotensin II antagonists
both lower BP - Anti-coagulants
-
-heparin sodium
-warfarin sodium (coumadin) - Heparin Sodium
-
-IV form only, initiated in hospital
-monitored by Activated partial thromboplastin test (aPTT) which measures certain part of coagulation cascade - If aPTT is high..
- give less heparin sodium
- Warfarin Sodium (Coumadin)
-
-takes several days to work
-monitored by pro time (PT) or International Normalization Ratio (INR)
-wait 24 hrs before starting heparin - Recommendation for INR control
- INR at 2.5X control
- Normal protocol for anti-coag drugs
- start IV heparin and warfarin at the same time, then discontinue heparin after the warfarin reached therapeutic levels
- Warfarin is absolutely indicated for:
-
-pts with cardiac source of embolization (atrial fib, mural thrombus)
Coumadin rx reduced A-fib associated stroke risk from 4.5%/year to 1.4%/year - Warfarin is relatively indicated for:
-
-pts c positive hypercoagulability tests
-"strokes-in-evolution"
-if TIAs continue on platelet inhibitor therapy - Deciding between Anti-platelet and anti-coagulant therapy
-
-For TIAs, start with anti-platelet agent
-If TIAs persist while on antiplatelet agent, use anticoagulant
-for cardiac thromboemboli, use anticoagulant
-for abnormal protein C, protein S, etc, use anticoagulant - Cholesteral-lowering agents
-
-shown to cause regression of atherosclerotic plaques
-if >70 yo, it is too late to expect them to work - How to Manage pts who can't/won't have surgery
-
-if ASA doesn't control sx, try clopidogrel or ticlopidine
-if that doesn't work, try ASA + clopidogrel
-if that doesn't control sx, try warfarin alone
-if that doesn't control sx, try warfarin + ASA (RISKY!! can cause death from bleeding ulcers) - 2 pairs of blood vessesl that supply the brain
-
-internal carotid arteries
-vertebral arteries (join to form basilar artery) - Clinical feature with occlusion of Anterior cerebral artery
- -Contralateral leg weakness
- Clinical feature with occlusion of middle cerebral artery
-
-contralateral face and arm > leg weakness
-sensory loss
-visual field deficit
-aphasia - Clinical feature with occlusion of posterior cerebral artery
- -contralateral visual field deficit
- Clinical feature with occlusion of basilar artery
- -oculomotor deficits and/or ataxia with opposite side motor and sensory deficits
- Clinical feature with occlusion of vertebral artery
- -lower CN deficits and/or ataxia with opposite side sensory deficits
- Clinical feature with occlusion of penetrators
- -contralateral motor or sensory deficit without cortical signs
- Cortical signs include:
-
-aphasia
-apraxia
-neglect
-other cognitive abnormalities - Ataxia
- -unsteady and clumsy motion of the limbs and trunk d/t failure of the gross coordination of muscle movements
- aphasia
- -loss or impairment of the ability to produce and/or comprehend language
- apraxia
- -loss of the ability to execute or carry out learned movements depsite having the desire, and physical ability to perform the movements
- AVM pathophysiology
-
-shunt bwn arterial and venous system typically as a tangle of abnormal vessels
-vessels that tangle are typically very thin compared to intercranial vessels - AVM most frequent location
- posterior half of the hemispheres
- AVM presentation
-
-HA
-seizure
-intercranial hemorrhage
-bruits over eye or mastoid processes may be heard in pts with intercerebral AVMs - AVM dX
-
-MRI better than CT
-except CT may show calcifications or bleeds if any are present - AVM tx
-
-surgical treatment if symptomatic (clip off AVM)
-stereotactic radiation treatment - AVM prognosis
-
-15% moratility rate if lesions bleeds
-small lesions bleed more often - Cavernous Angioma
-
-similar to AVM but usually not connecting high pressure arteries to low pressure veins (ususally connecting high pressure to high pressure or low pressure to low pressure)
-may or may not be hereditary
-low bleed risk
-seizure risk depending on location - Cavernous Angioma pathophysiology
-
-capillary grouping that forms deep within the white matter and brainstem with no intervening neural structures
-typically <1 cm in diameter and often associated with a venous anomaly
-may form large pool of blood (like one vessel that grows really large) - cavernous angioma tx
- -surgery
- Chiari Malformation/Syrinx: Etiology
- -cerebellar tonsils protrude though foramen magnum and into cervical spinal canal
- Chiari Malformation/Syrinx: Pathophysiology
- -d/t blockage created by the tonsils, CSF flow is interupted or occluded resulting in the formation of syringomyelia (or syrinx cavities)
- Chiari Malformation/Syrinx: presentation
-
-present like central cord syndrome (from high cervical pressure)
-cough HA, neck/arm/facial pain - Chiari Malformation/Syrinx Dx
- MRI (white line in middle of spinal cord from fluid/CSF being pushed further and further down into spinal cord)
- Chiari Malformation/Syrinx Tx
-
-conservative tx is usually unsuccessful
-surgical decompression of the posterior fossa is typically necessary
-shunt if recurrent syrinx (through neck, through chest cavity, into abdominal cavity)