Stroke (cerebrovascular accident, CVA)

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  • Опубліковано 12 лип 2024
  • This is a brief video on strokes, covering pathophysiology, presentation, as well as acute and chronic management/treatments.
    I created this presentation with Google Slides.
    Images were created or adapted from Wikimedia Commons.
    ADDITIONAL TAGS:
    Stroke
    cerebrovascular accident (CVA)
    By Blausen Medical Communications, Inc. - see ticket for details, CC BY 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Overview & pathophys
    Cause / risk factors
    Presentation
    Initial workup
    Chronic therapy / prevention
    Overview / pathophys
    Stroke/cerebrovascular accident (CVA) is #3 cause of death in USA
    #1 cause of neurologic disability
    Ischemic
    Thrombotic vs Embolic
    Hemorrhagic
    Subarachnoid hemorrhage (btwn arachnoid mater and pia mater)
    vs
    Intracranial hemorrhage (into
    parenchymal or ventricular space)
    By Manu5 - www.scientificanimations.com/w..., CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By James Heilman, MD - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia
    .org/w/index.php?curid=11414174
    By Blausen Medical Communications, Inc. - see ticket for details, CC BY 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By ElinorHunt - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Ischemic (85%)
    Similar to heart attack but in the brain:
    Embolic: clot forms (on damaged heart valves, during afib, carotid stenosis, (or DVT→PFO)), thrown to smaller vessel, gets lodged, occludes blood
    Thrombotic: atherosclerosis. Risk factors include diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, obesity, smoking, age
    Others: smaller arteries (lacunar), vasospasm/migraine, drug abuse, dissection, arteritis
    Younger pts: hypercoag states, like OCPs; protein C/S deficiencies; cocaine, amphetamines; p vera, sickle cell
    Cause / risk factors
    Hemorrhagic (15%)
    Subarachnoid hemorrhage
    (btwn arachnoid mater
    and pia mater)
    vs
    Intracranial hemorrhage (into
    parenchymal or ventricular space)
    Worst prognosis (50% 30-d mortality)
    Cause: blood vessel or aneurysm rupture
    Risks: hypertension, trauma, anticoagulant therapy
    Overview & pathophys
    SAH most common ruptures
    Thunderclap → SAH
    +/- neck stiff, vomiting
    Xanthochromia:
    ACA: paralysis of legs and feet, confusion, urinary incontinence
    MCA: paralysis of face and arms, aphasia (speech), contralateral sensory, homonymous hemianopsia
    PCA: vision, ipsilateral sensory of face, contralateral sensory of limps,
    ACA
    MCA
    Locked in syndrome
    Syncope
    Cerebellar:
    dysdiadokinesia, ataxia, discoordination
    By William Laborde, MD, Brandon Mong, MD, and Joel Mosley, MD - William Laborde, MD, Brandon Mong, MD, and Joel Mosley, MD (2019-06-24). The Bloody CSF Tap - Pearls and Pitfalls. emDocs.net.- "emDocs is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.", CC BY 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By File:1421 Sensory Homunculus.jpg: OpenStax Collegederivative work: Popadius - This file was derived from: 1421 Sensory Homunculus.jpg:, CC BY 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    By Rhcastilhos - Gray519.png, Public Domain, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
    Initial workup
    First test: CT scan w/o contrast
    If blood → hemorrhagic stroke (15%) → consult neurosurg to coil clip bleed, reduce BP 150, give FFP, prevent hydrocephalus with shunt or LPs or craniotomy, seizure prophylaxis with anticonvulsants, prevent vasospasm with CCB
    Next consider tPA (tissue plasminogen activator) to break clot, save penumbra
    If pt presents within 3 (4.5) hrs of definite symptom onset AND no head trauma AND no surgery within 21 days AND never had a brain bleed
    Later workup:
    BP → permissive hypertension with ischemic stroke.(unless tPA)
    EKG → if afib, give anticoagulation (warfarin (without Hep bridge) or NOACs (apixaban, dabigatran, rivaroxaban, and edoxaban))
    Echo → check cardiac valves and afib for source of embolism
    Carotid duplex ultrasound
    if 80% stenosis or 70%+symptoms → stent or carotid endarterectomy
    Chronic therapy (for future stroke prevention)
    BP → Chronic: maintain 140/80 with ACEi, diuretics, other agents
    Hyperlipidemia → high intensity statin (atorvastatin 40, 80 OR resuva 20, 40)
    Diabetes → maintain A1c 7% with metformin, other oral agents, insulin
    Smoking cessation
    Antiplatelet for life → aspirin (or clopidogrel) +/- dipyridamole
    Anticoagulation for life → warfarin or NOAC; CHA2DS2-VASc score gets +2
    Congestive heart failure
    Hypertension
    Age = 75
    Diabetes type 2
    Stroke or TIA or thromboembolism (2)
    Vascular dz (PAD, MI)
    Age 65-74
    Sex category (female)

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