Title: Stroke
1Stroke
- Laura Lewis Mason RN, MS, ANP-C
- University at Buffalo Neurosurgery
- State University of New York
2Definition of Stroke
- Sudden loss of circulation to an area of the
brain - Ischemic strokes are caused by a brain embolism
intracranial athererosclerosis and/or
liopohyalinosis of small penetrating vessels.
Ischemic strokes accounts for 80 of all strokes - Hemorrhagic strokes are caused by ruptured
aneurysms, AVMs, severe hypertension bleeding
diathesis (malignancies) and trauma. Hemmorhagic
stroke accounts for 20 of all strokes2 - Flow limitation (vessel dissection)
3Epidemiology
- In United States estimated 600,000 to 750,000
strokes occur annually - Ranks third among causes of death and first among
causes of long term disability
4Diagnosis
Yearly Incidence in the US
5Projected number of strokes in US2002 - 2025
30,000 Aneurysms
Source Stroke, January 2004 J. P. Broderick, MD
6Epidemiology
- 1/3 recover
- 1/3 die
- 1/3 destroyed
7 8- Direct cost of stroke
- 60 Billion
9Cost
- Measured in loss of work, hospitalization,
rehabilitation, and care of survivors in nursing
homes - Major cost or impact of a stroke is the loss of
independence that occurs in 30 of survivors
10Stroke
- Most prevalent neurologic condition
- Most common discharge diagnosis to nursing homes
- Most common diagnosis treated in rehab
- LEADING CAUSE OF ADULT DISABILITY
11Stroke Survivors
- NIH study of survivors of ischemic stroke age 65
and older - 50 had partial paralysis
- 30 were unable to walk without assistance
- 19 had cognitive impairment
- 35 had depressive symptoms
- 26 were institutionalized in a nursing home
12Stroke IgnoranceGallup Survey
- 97 cant name stroke symptoms
- 44 had suffered CVA or had family with CVA
- lt50 identified brain as organ of insult
- Most fear CVA more than MI
13Acute Stroke Patients
- 25 correctly identified symptoms
- 24 seek medical help within 3 hours
- Patients with previous stroke not more inclined
to seek medical help
14Why Dont CVA Patients Seek Treatment?
- Dont recognize symptoms
- Think symptoms will subside
- Think nothing can be done
- Worried about cost
- Denial - dont want fears confirmed
- Fear of hospitals
15Stroke
- 80 think their symptoms are not serious!!
16Symptoms of Stroke
- Sudden.
- Loss of vision in one eye or the other
- Weakness of the face, arm, or leg especially on
one side of the body - Sudden confusion or inability to speak
- Sudden loss of balance or incoordination
- Sudden severe headache
17 18Risk Factors of a Stroke
- Unmodifiable factors
- Age Increase risk of stroke with increase in
age. For every decade after 55 risk of stroke
doubles. 2/3 of all strokes ocurr in people gt65 - Gender Mengt risk for stroke (1.25xs) but more
women die from stroke - Race/Ethnicity African Americans have double
the risk than caucasian. AA between ages of 45-55
have 4-5xs the stroke death rate than caucasian - Family history genetic tendency for stroke risk
factors, lifestyle, htn, diabetes
19Risk Factors for a Stroke
- Modifiable-
- Hypertension People with hypertension have a
risk for stroke that is 4-6xs higher than the
risk for those without htn. - Heart Disease Atrial fibrillation- increases
risk 4-6. Valve disease. - Diabetes Three times the risk of stroke than
those without diabetes - Cholesterol High Cholesterol gt150
- Smoking doubles persons risk for ischemic stroke
and increases persons risk for SAH by up to 3.5 - Alcohol Consumption
- Inactivity
- Blood dyscrasias/Malignancies
- Head and Neck Injuries May damage the
cerebrovascular system, ie spontaneous carotid
dissections - Infections viral and bacterial infections
combined with other risk factors add a small risk
20 21U.S. Stroke Belt
Source US Census Bureau Postcensal Population
Estimates (IDC9 430-438.9) (1991-1995)
22Stroke Risk
10-fold increase
23- Management of risk factors can reduce stroke
incidence by - 50
24Risk Factor Modification
- Lipid reduction
- Blood pressure control
- Antiplatelet/anticoagulation therapy
- Smoking cessation
- Physical activity counseling
- Beta blockers post MI
- ACE inhibitors in CHF
- Hormone replacement counseling
25Acute Stroke
- Requires multidisciplinary care
- EMS involved in confirming signs and symptoms of
stroke - EMS initiates call to stroke center and
transportation of patient to the ER
26Time is Brain
27Rapid Triage and Assessment
- Time is Brain
- Is the etiology of the neurological deficit
ischemic, hemorrhagic or other system
abnormalities? - Determination of the etiology of stroke as well
as time frame of when symptoms first occurred
determines our treatment plan
28NIHSS
- 42 point scale comprised of 13 items that grade
orientation, language, hemi-attention, motor,
sensory, coordination, and visual deficits - Rapidly determines severity and possible location
of a stroke - Score is associated with clinical outcome
- NIHSS 0 no deficit
- 5 is minor
- Helps identify those that are likely to respond
to thrombolytic therapy and those at risk ( gt20) - Is formally incorporated in the guidelines for
thrombolytic therapy by the America Stroke
Association
29Radiographic Evaluation
- CT head
- CT perfusion
- MRI diffusion/perfusion
- CT angiogram/MR angiogram
- Cerebral Angiography
30Aquilion One
- 320 x 0.5 mm detector rows with 16cm of coverage
- Table with 200cm scan range and 660 lb. maximum
load
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33Current Strategies For the Endovascular
Management of Acute Stroke
- Mechanical (Pull the clot out)
- Pharmacological (Dissolve the clot)
- Endovascular Bypass (Stent the vessel open)
34War on Stroke Tools
- Thrombolysis
- Intravenous
- Intra-arterial
- wire, snare, cage etc
- Angioplasty
- Stent
- Suction thrombectomy
- Ultrasound (IA / external)
- Other
35IV Thrombolysis
- marginally effective/limitations
- Large branch occlusions
- may cause intracerebral hemorrhage
- time window 3 hours
- mild to moderate stroke
- not much better than placebo
- NIHSS gt10 gt 75 decrease odds of recovery
(STARS study) - NINDS Trial Recanalization rates 26-40 (based
on iv TPA data) - Mortality 21
NIH Trial NEJM 95 3331581 MAST Trial Lancet
95 3461509 ECASS Trial JAMA 95
2741017 ECASS II Trial Lancet 98 3521245
36Intra-arterial ThrombolysisAdvantages
- Angiographic visualization of thrombus
- patients without thrombus dont get treated
- High concentration of lytic drugs locally in
thrombus and lower systemic doses - Improved titration of medication dose with
angiographic visualization - dissections can be treated
37Concentric Multi-Merci
- Multi-Merci Recanalization Rates
- 54.1 (60/111) Retriever alone
- 69.4 (77/111) Post Procedure
38PenumbraThrombus Perturbation and Aspiration
39Penumbra
- NIHSSgt8 and less than 8h from onset
- 81.6 revascularization to TIMI 2 or 3
- ICH symptomatic 11.2,
- asymptomatic 16.8
- NIHSS improved by gt/4 57.8
- Mortality at 30d 26.4
40Angioplasty/ StentLessons From the Heart
- Useful for underlying atheroma
- Occlusions refractory to reopening with other
means - Worthwhile to perform stenting to restore flow
early - Recanalization vs. sidebranch occlusion
Maverick OTW Balloon Catheter (Boston Scientific)
41- Case example
-
- 83 yo male
- acute RMCA stroke
- left plegic, R gaze preference, L facial droop,
dysarthric - NIHSS gt 10
- onset gt 14 hrs
- PMH paroxysmal afib (discovered on this
admission)
42Initial CT perfusion relative CBV preservation
suggests ischemia rather than infarct, ie
salvageable!!
43Combo micro guidecath run demonstrates clot
location/size, distal patency
44After MERCI, integrilin, retavase, MERCI again ?
TIMI-II inferior division
clot still present
45s/p Gateway balloon angioplasty ? TIMI-III
inferior division, TIMI-II superior division
clot, no sup. M2
46Pre
Post
47preop CBF
preop TTP
postop TTP
area of infarct
area at risk
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49- 76 year old woman with prior history of multiple
brain - Aneurysms clipped
- Unknown onset over 12 hours ago
- NIHSS 30
- History of atrial fibrillation off Coumadin for
GI bleed
50CT perfusion bilateral PCA ischemia
51CTA shows midbasilar artery occlusion
52CTA shows tortous access
53Solution R radial artery access Initial angiogram
confirms mid-basilar occlusion
54MERCI retriever deployed
55Clot retrieved
56- Post intervention improvement
- from NIHSS 30 down to 4
- Discharge to rehab,
- Home in 2 weeks
57Acute Implantation of Intracranial Stents
Endovascular Bypass
- Advantages
- Time Immediate restoration of flow
- Success High recanalization rates (maybe 100)
- Currently only used in setting of previous device
failure - Could potentially do this earlier
- Technically straight forward for experienced
operator
58Wingspan Stent
- Balloon angioplasty
- Stent placement
- Self-expanding
- Flexible
- Microcatheter delivery system
SUNY Buffalo FDA Sponsored IDE 9/07
59 60Stent Assisted Revascularization for Stroke
- 26 year old female presents 3 hours out with R
hemiparesis and aphasia - NIHSS 9
61CT Perfusion shows established infarct in insula
with at risk L hemisphere
62Initial CTP, immediate post intervention and
delayed Head CT Post intervention NIHSS 1
Follow-up CT 48 hours later
Pre-Stent CT perfusion TTP
63Stent Assisted Revascularization in Stroke (SARIS)
- FDA approved IDE registry to evaluate safety of
primary (no ia or iv thrombolysis or mechanical
retrieval)wingspan stenting for acute stroke at - University at Buffalo Barrow Neurological
Institute
64SARIS Recanalization
- All patients achieved recanalization
- TIMI 2 40
- TIMI 3 60
- Plt0.0001 compared to presenting TIMI scores
65SARIS Clinical Improvement
- 65 improved 4 NIHSS points during
hospitalization
66Are stents the answer?
67Are stents the answer?
- We dont know
- BUT..
- It sure looks promising!
-
68- Intra-arterial Treatment of Acute Stroke is
beneficial - Algorithms are for guidance must individualize
treatment! - Selection based on physiological imaging!
- Need technology designed for the brain!
69Thank you!