Stroke
Brain Attack, CVA, Mini-Stroke, Pin Stroke, and TIA (transient ischemic attack- brief and passing)
Stroke Awareness
Stroke Defined
50% of the general population is at risk
> 50% of healthcare workers are at risk (stress)
-90% of stroke suvivors has chronic deficits (such as dysarthria)
Stroke Statistics
80%of strokes are Ischemic
20% of strokes are hemorrhagic
Stroke Epidemiology
Age-
Risk of stroke doubles each decade after 55y
Race-
African Americans: 233/100K
Hispanics: 196/100K
Whites: 93/100K
Heredity-
Paternal Stroke: 2x as likely for stroke
Maternal Stroke: 1.4x as likely for stroke
Time is brain
Atrial Fibrillation
Risk Factors for Stroke
Modifiable Risk Factors for Stroke
Non-Modifiable Risk Factors for Stroke
Common Stroke Symptoms
Have these: go to the hospital
Rapid Detection of Stroke
[F] FACE: Ask the Patient to smile; Any drooping?
[A] ARM: Ask the Person to raise both arms; Any drifting?
[S] SPEECH: Ask the Person to repeat simple sentences; Any dysarthria?
[T] TIME: Observe any signs; Call 911!
make sure patient is not hypoglycemic- low sugar can mimic stroke signs
Stroke Classifications
Ischemic Strokes
Occur when arteries are blocked by blood clots or by the build up of plaque and other fatty deposits
As such, blood flow is insufficient to a given area
80%+ of strokes are ischemic in nature
•Ministroke, pin stroke, TIA- brief occlusion of a vessel.
large and small vessels
2 Types of Ischemic Strokes
Thrombotic: blood clot forms within a blood vessel in the brain; vessel supplying blood to the brain (Stationary)
Embolic: blood clot forms with in the heart or elsewhere, dislodges, and becomes lodged in the brain (moves)
Lacunar Infarct (Ischemia)
Obstruction of blood flow in the small, deep brain arteries; occur frequently in the Basal Ganglia, Internal Capsule, Thalamus, Brain Stem!
o Lacunar- stoke occurs in small, deep brain arteries. Causes focal damage. Often occur in subcortical areas (basal ganglia, internal capsule, brainstem)
Ischemic Penumbra
The penumbra is an area of dysfunctional ischemic tissue; suggests a possible lacunar state. Can use tPA with ischemic strokes
o Penumbra- tissue around the blood clot (hypoprofused- blood cannot reach area)
Hemorrhagic Strokes
•A small bleed in the brain (the body will absorb the blood) Astrocytes will help clean up the bleed.
Intracerebral Hemorrhage
blood is moving faster and puts strain on the blood vessels
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
in the subarachnoid space- can suck the blood out at times or the brain may be able to reabsorb the blood
Intraventricular Hemorrhage
-Extension of both intracerebral hemorrhages and/or subarachnoid hemorrhages into the ventricular spaces
Aneurysm
Violation of MKH
Clipping an Aneurysm
•Clipping- clip off the aneurysm, leave it in place because it will eventually congeal over (let it clot).
Coiling an Aneurysm
•Coiling- go through phremral artery in groin and use a tube and they snake it into the ballooned aneurysm to reinforce it so it doesn’t burst.