STROKE
What is it?
Ischaemic infarction or brain haemorrhage
STROKE
Risk factors?
STROKE
Cause?
STROKE
Number of deaths?
1 per 1000 per year
Clinical Presentation of ACA Stroke
1) Leg weakness
2) Sensory disturbances in leg
3) incontinence
4) Gait apraxia (can move lying down but cant walk)
5) drowsiness
Clinical Presentation of MCA Stroke
1) Contralateral arm+leg weakness
2) Contralateral sensory loss
3) hemianopia
4) Aphasia (language impairment)
5) Dysphagia
6) facial droop
Clinical Presentation of PCA Stroke
1) contralateral hemianopia
2) Cortical blindness
3) Visual agnosia (inability to process sensory information)
4) facial blindness
5) Facial droop
Clinical Presentation of Lateral Medullary Infarct occlusion of PICA (brainstem)
1) ipsilateral horner’s syndrome
2) Vomiting
3) Vertigo (environment or you are spinning)
4) Cerebellar signs
5) Facial numbness
What is Horner’s syndrome characterised by?
classic triad of miosis (ie, constricted pupil), partial ptosis, and loss of hemifacial sweating (ie, anhidrosis).
Miosis
Ptosis
Anhidrosis
STROKE
tests?
ACT FAST
STROKE
Posterior circulating stroke features?
STROKE
Acute treatment? within 1 hour
- check pulse, BP, ECG
STROKE
Within 4.5 hours?
thrombolysis (IV alteplase)
STROKE
how should a patient by hydrated?
IV so no choking.
food assistance and TED stockinga
STROKE
Primary prevention?
statins, smoking, DM, HTN, exercise
STROKE
Secondary prevention
TRANSIENT ISCHAEMIC ATTACK (TIA)
Cause?
1) microemboli- which then lyse, from atheromas or thrombus
2) Temporary decrease in cerebral perfusion
TRANSIENT ISCHAEMIC ATTACK (TIA)
Risk Factors?
TRANSIENT ISCHAEMIC ATTACK (TIA)
What is the definition?
TRANSIENT ISCHAEMIC ATTACK (TIA)
carotid Symptoms?
TRANSIENT ISCHAEMIC ATTACK (TIA)
Vertebrobasilar symptoms?
What is Amaurosis Fugax?
TRANSIENT ISCHAEMIC ATTACK (TIA)
Investigation?
CXR
ECG
What is a ABCD2 score?
Determines time frame needed to investigate a stroke (score of 6+ means 35.5% of stroke in next week)