Stroke Management for the EMS Provider - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 73
About This Presentation
Title:

Stroke Management for the EMS Provider

Description:

Improve knowledge of identification of stroke signs and symptoms. ... VS; FSBS; time last seen normal; stroke symptoms; meds the patient takes. 3 hours ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:507
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 74
Provided by: douglasv7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Stroke Management for the EMS Provider


1
Stroke Management for the EMS Provider
  • Alameda County Educational Module
  • Brenda Krokoski RN (Alta Bates/Summit Stroke
    Center)
  • Douglas Van Houten RN (Washington Hospital Stroke
    Center)

2
Stroke Management for the EMS Provider
  • At the completion of this module, the EMS
    Provider will be able to
  • Describe the various types of stroke and their
    etiology.
  • Discuss the imperatives for best practice in
    regard to EMS stroke management.
  • List 5 or more risk factors for acute stroke.
  • Define penumbra and how this concept is
    important in stroke.
  • Generally describe the major vessels involved in
    acute ischemic stroke.
  • Discuss the therapeutic window for thrombolytic
    therapy in stroke.
  • Identify interventions that individual EMS
    providers can make to improve outcomes in stroke.

3
Stroke Management for the EMS Provider
  • Instructions
  • Page through the module to learn the content.
  • Complete the post test.

4
Is STROKE a health problem in the US today?
  • 700,000 strokes every year
  • Stroke is the 3rd leading cause of death
  • One person dies of stroke every 3 minutes
  • Stroke is the leading cause of serious, long term
    disability
  • 5 million stroke survivors, but with substantial
    morbidity
  • 18 unable to return to work
  • 4 require total custodial care

5
Is STROKE a health problem in the US today?
  • Only 50-70 of stroke survivors regain functional
    independence
  • 20 are institutionalized within 3 months
  • 22 of men 25 of women die within 1 year of
    their first stroke
  • Locally, African-Americans have 50 more strokes
    than Caucasians, and twice as many as Asians and
    Hispanics (Statistics from the American Stroke
    Association)

6
African Americans Stroke
  • Incidence is nearly double that of white
    Americans
  • Suffer more extensive physical impairments
  • Twice as likely to die from stroke
  • High incidence of risk factors for stroke
  • hypertension
  • diabetes
  • obesity
  • smoking
  • sickle cell anemia

(National Stroke Association)
7
Women Stroke
  • Stroke kills more than twice as many American
    women every year as breast cancer
  • More women than men die from stroke
  • Women over age 30 who smoke and take
    high-estrogen oral contraceptives have a stroke
    risk 22 times higher than average

(National Stroke Association)
8
How Bad is a Major Stroke?Elders at Risk for
Stroke (1183, TTO), --Samsa et al, Am Heart J 1998
Worse than death
Equivalent to being well
Equivalent to death
9
Is STROKE a health problem in the US today?
  • YES, stroke is a major health problem in the US
    today.
  • EMS Providers are closely involved with this
    patient population and are a vital component of
    the Stroke Chain of Survival.
  • Increased knowledge and personal motivation on
    the part of EMS providers can
  • Greatly reduce death and disability due to
    stroke.
  • Improve stroke centers ability to provide
    thrombolytic therapy.
  • Make a positive impact on communities strides to
    reduce costs for healthcare and improve outcomes.

10
Goals for EMS Provider Care of Stroke Patients
  • Improve knowledge of identification of stroke
    signs and symptoms.
  • Develop a rapid assessment process.
  • Facilitate transfer of stroke victims to Primary
    Stroke Centers in the quickest and safest manner.
  • Pre-notify the Stroke Center, Possible acute
    stroke in route.
  • Encourage family members familiar with the
    patient care to either ride with the transfer
    vehicle or drive to the stroke center ASAP to
    provide more patient information.

11
Goals for EMS Provider Care of Stroke Patients
  • 6. Obtain reliable list of meds taken or bring
    bag of all medications taken.
  • Obtain a set of vital signs and finger stick
    blood sugar at the site.
  • Reliably identify familys best estimation of
    when the patient was last seen normal.
  • Administer the Cincinnati Pre-hospital Stroke
    Scale.
  • Provide the receiving facility with a quick,
    complete verbal report that incorporates the
    information obtained since arrival on scene.

12
Review Anatomy Physiology of Acute Ischemic
Stroke
  • What is acute ischemic stroke?
  • What is the major vasculature involved?
  • When circulation is suddenly reduced, how quickly
    is brain tissue affected?
  • What is penumbra?
  • What are the types and etiologies of stroke?
  • What about different stroke symptoms?

13
What Is Stroke ?
A stroke occurs when blood flow to the brain is
interrupted by a blocked or burst blood vessel.
14
(No Transcript)
15
  • One quarter of cardiac
  • output goes to the 5-6
  • pound organthe brain.
  • The brain needs a
  • constant supply of
  • Oxygen
  • Glucose
  • Other nutrients
  • Circulation is supplied
  • via 2 pairs of arteries
  • Internal carotids
  • Vertebrals

16
The Major Circulation to the Brain
17
(No Transcript)
18
PENUMBRA (That tissue surrounding the infarct
that is salvageable, but at risk.)
Rapid transfer to the stroke center will allow
for protection of penumbra through emergency
interventions and medical management.
19
Cerebrovascular Disease Pathogenesis
Ischemic Stroke (83)
Hemorrhagic Stroke (17)
Atherothrombotic Cerebrovascular Disease (20)
Intracerebral Hemorrhage (59)
Cryptogenic (30)
Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (41)
Lacunar (25) Small vessel disease
Embolism (20)
Albers GW, et al. Chest. 1998114683S-698S. Rosam
ond WD, et al. Stroke. 199930736-743.
20
Acute Ischemic Stroke(What do you see?)
  • Deficits
  • Unilateral (though not always) weakness
  • Unilateral sensory deficit
  • Visual deficits (blindness, gaze palsy, double)
  • Speech (slurred a motor dysfunction)
  • Language (aphasia damage to the brains speech
    center)
  • Ataxia (lack of coordinated movement)
  • Cognitive impairment
  • Like real estateLocation, Location, Location

21
What Parts of the Brain Are Affected by Stroke?
22
What Are the Effects of Stroke?
  • Left Brain

23
What Are the Effects of Stroke?
  • Right Brain

24
Stroke Assessment Scale(Cincinnati Pre-hospital
Stroke Scale)
The sky is blue in Cincinnati.
Any abnormality means an abnormal Cincinnati
scale for stroke. Probably accurately
detects stroke 80 of the time.
25
Stroke Assessment in the Field
  • Administer Cincinnati Scale.
  • If abnormal, facilitate a rapid transfer to the
    primary stroke center. (Alta Bates in North
    Alameda CountyWashington Hospital in South
    Alameda County.
  • Pre-notify the receiving stroke centerpossible
    acute stroke in route.

26
Identify Time Last Seen Normal
  • A 75 year old man with HTN and diabetes finishes
    dinner with a friend at 8pm. He drives himself
    the short distance home that night, and a
    daughter stops by the next morning to find him
    still in bed and with right side weakness and
    severe aphasia. When do we assume the stoke
    occurred? (Answer last seen normal at 8pm)
  • A 35 year old hypertensive man who is known to be
    non-compliant with meds is found slumped over in
    his car in a job site parking area at 3pm. In
    the ED he was found to have a massive left
    hemispheric ischemic stroke. His wife said he
    left for work at 7am that morning as normal, and
    she had a clear and normal cell phone
    conversation with him at 1230pm. At 1pm a
    co-worker stated the man said he wasnt feeling
    well and was going to his car to rest. At the
    time the co-worker noticed his speech was
    slurred. What time can we use as the time last
    seen normal? (Answer 1230pm)

27
Types of Acute Ischemic Strokes
  • Middle Cerebral Artery Stroke
  • VertebralBasilar Artery Strokes
  • Lacunar Strokes

28
Types of Strokes(Middle Cerebral Artery MCA)
29
CT Scan of Acute Ischemic Stroke (Left MCA
territory stroke)
30
Types of Strokes(Middle Cerebral Artery MCA)
  • The most common artery occluded in AIScan be
    proximal or from carotid circulation.
  • Features
  • Motor/Sensory Deficit face, arm, leg
  • Speech deficit dysarthria (slurred speech)
  • Language deficit if in dominant hemisphere
  • Gaze palsy eyes directed towards side of AIS
  • Blindness visual field cut (homonymous
    hemianopsia)

31
Types of Strokes(VertebralBasilar Artery)
  • Features
  • Cranial nerve involvement hearing, visual,
    facial, swallowing
  • Can have bilateral weakness
  • Cerebellar signs ataxia
  • Sensory deficits
  • Vertigo often nystagmus
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Common to have waxing and waning symptoms

32
Lacunar Strokes
  • These strokes are ischemic in nature.
  • Mainly caused by HTN.
  • Occurs in the small penetrating arteries of the
    brain.
  • Presentation affects the arm, leg, and face,
    sometimes silent. Deficits are equal to all
    areas.

33
(No Transcript)
34
Conditions That Mimic AIS
  • Bells Palsy
  • Todds Paralysis
  • Hemorrhagic Stroke
  • Subdural Hematoma
  • Other conditions

35
Conditions That Mimic AIS
  • Bells Palsy

Bells Palsy is a viral infection of the facial
nerve which causes stroke-like symptoms
unilateral facial droop, sensory deficit,
dysarthria, etc.
36
Conditions That Mimic AIS
  • Differential dx
  • Hx women, pregnancy, viral illness
  • Cant close eye completely or raise forehead
  • May have facial pain
  • No other stroke symptoms
  • May have no risk factors for stroke

37
Conditions That Mimic AIS
  • Todds Paralysis unilateral weakness that
    occurs after a seizure.
  • Can involve speech, language, visual and sensory
  • May be due to hyperpolarization in the area of
    the seizure
  • Resolves within 48 hours
  • Key concern in regard to thrombolytic therapy

38
Conditions That Mimic AIS
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Metabolic conditions fever, hyponatremia,
    drugs, etc.
  • Psychogenic
  • Complex migraines
  • Hypertensive crisis

39
What are the risks factors for Ischemic Stroke?
  • Modifiable Risks
  • HTN
  • CAD/Carotid Disease/PVD
  • Atrial Fibrillation
  • Diabetes
  • Weight
  • High Cholesterol/Diet
  • Lack of exercise
  • ETOH/Drug abuse
  • Coagulopathy- Cancer, Sickle Cell Anemia
  • PFO- Patent Foramen Ovale
  • Non-Modifiable Risks
  • Age-gt55
  • Race- African Americans have 2x the risk of death
    and disability. Asians have 1.4x the risk of
    death and disability.
  • Sex- 9 greater chance in men. (61 of stroke
    deaths occur in women)
  • Previous Stroke or TIA
  • Family History of Stroke

40
Goals for Treatment in the ED
  • EMS rapid identification pre-notification of
    the Emergency Dept.
  • Quick evaluation in ED.
  • Last seen normal lt 3 hr.
  • Door-to-CT scan lt 25 minutes
  • CT-to-Radiologist Reading lt 20 minutes
  • IV TPA administration lt 15 minutes
  • (Door-to-needle within 60 minutes.)

41
What can be done for an acute ischemic stroke?
  • These patients may be appropriate for clot
    busting drugs. Tissue Plasminogen Activator
    (TPA).
  • Requires a rapid, coordinated response.
  • IV TPA can only be given within the first 3 hours
    of symptom onset.
  • Expected response 60 minutes from door to
    needle.

42
Tissue Plasminogen Activator
  • Natural body substance. Recombinant TPA converts
    Plasminogen to plasmin, which in turn breaks down
    fibrin and fibrinogen, thereby dissolving the
    clot.
  • Dose for Stroke 0.9mg/kg up to a dose not to
    exceed 90mg. 10 of dose as an IV bolus the
    rest over one hour by IV drip.
  • IV window of opportunity is lt 3 hours of known
    symptom onset.

43
Early Rx was better in the NINDS tPA Trial
Marler JR, et al. Early stroke treatment
associated with better outcome. The NINDS rt-PA
Stroke Study. Neurology 2000551649-1655.
44
Transition
  • Hemorrhagic Stroke

45
Hemorrhagic Stroke(Intracranial HemorrhageICH
Subarachnoid HemorrhageSAH)
  • Intracranial Hemorrhage (Hypertensive)
  • gt twice as common as SAH
  • more likely to result in death or severe
    disability
  • 37,000 Americans/year
  • 35-52 dead within 1 month (half of deaths in the
    first 2 days)
  • Only 10 living independently in 1 month
    improves to only 20 within 6 months

46
Hemorrhagic Stroke(Intracranial HemorrhageICH
Subarachnoid HemorrhageSAH)
  • Risk factors
  • Hypertension
  • Advancing age
  • Coagulation disorders therapy
  • ETOH abuse
  • Drug use (meth, cocaine, crack, etc.)
  • Ischemic strokehemorrhagic transformation

47
Hemorrhagic Stroke(Intracranial HemorrhageICH
Subarachnoid HemorrhageSAH)
  • Presenting signs
  • Suddensigns over minutes to hours
  • Headache
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Decreasing LOC
  • Extremely elevated blood pressure
  • (All of these are signs of increased ICP)

48
Hemorrhagic Stroke(Intracranial HemorrhageICH
Subarachnoid HemorrhageSAH)
  • Differential Diagnosis

AISoften high BP AISrare decreased LOC AISrare
or vague H.A. AISrare nausea
vomiting AISoften wake up with the
symptoms
ICHusually very high BP ICH50 of the time ?
LOC ICH40 of the time H.A. ICH50 of time
vomiting ICHrarely wake up with
symptoms (15)
  • Final diagnosis is by CT scan.

49
Weakened blood vessels in a Hypertensive Bleed
50
Autopsy of Intracerebral Hemorrhage
51
Small hemorrhagic stroke
52
Large hemorrhagic stroke
53
ICH Goals for Early Management
  • Airway management
  • Assure adequate oxygenation reduce hypercapnea
    (Remember ?CO2 ? ICP)
  • Prevent aspiration (Remember 50 of ICH patients
    vomit and have ALOC)
  • Prevent seizures
  • Acute mgt Fosphenytoin 500-1000 PE (phenytoin
    equivalents over 3-6 minutes)
  • Prevention Phenytoin 500-1000 mg/20-30 min

54
ICH Goals for Early Management
  • Blood Pressure Management
  • Very poor outcomes if BP is allowed to stay very
    highmore bleeding
  • Very poor outcomes if BP is allowed to drop
    precipitouslyremoves the brains attempt to
    perfuse a tight brain
  • Guidelines
  • In general, keep BP about 160/90 or MAP lt130
  • In the first 48 hours no BP drop gt 15-25 of
    presenting value

55
Hemorrhagic Stroke(Subarachnoid Hemorrhage)
  • Acute bleeding around the outside of the brain
    and into the subarachnoid space.
  • Usually from an aneurysm or arterio-venous
    malformation.
  • Statistics
  • 50 are fatal
  • 1--15 die before reaching the hospital
  • Those who survive are often impaired
  • 1-7 of all strokes

56
Hemorrhagic Stroke(Subarachnoid Hemorrhage)
  • Diagnosis
  • Thunderclap headache. It is the worst
    headache of my life!
  • Xanthochromic lumbar puncture (blood in the CSF
    not due to traumatic tap)
  • Star pattern on CT scan

57
Aneurysmal bleed
58
Classic Star Pattern of Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
59
Magnified view of cerebral aneurysm.
60
Subdural Hematoma
(Not a true stroke but symptoms can mimic stroke.)
61
Subdural Hematoma
  • Symptoms
  • Unilateral weakness, sensory deficit
  • Facial weakness
  • Dysarthria
  • Altered level of consciousness
  • Onset
  • Can be rapid
  • Can take months to show symptoms

62
Subdural HematomaCauses
  • Anticoagulation (Heparin, Coumadin)
  • Antithrombotics (Aspirin, Plavix)
  • ETOH abuse
  • Trauma (could be recent or months ago)
  • Advanced age (most common cause)

63
Subdural Hematoma
Small bridging veins from the dura mater to the
brain are stretched and can rupture releasing
blood into the subdural space and
causing pressure on that part of the brain. This
leads to the deficits seen.
64
Subdural Hematoma on CT Scan
65
Subdural HematomaTreatment Options
  • Medical Management
  • Correct Coags
  • Monitor neuro signs
  • Surgical Management
  • Correct Coags
  • Burr hole drainage
  • Craniotomy for removal of solid clot

66
Summing Up
  • The best stroke care is a coordinated approach
    and developed in a stroke center system of care.
  • Requires everyone to be on board
  • Patients/Families
  • EMS
  • ED
  • Stroke Unit
  • Stroke Rehabilitation

67
Summing Up
  • How well a patient does whether a patient has a
    life-long serious disability whether he/she
    lives or dies may depend on you and how you
    respond.
  • A few minutes delay may make a very big
    difference.
  • What you do really matters!

68
Emergent Stroke Care and the Chain of Survival
Patient Calling EMS ED
Stroke Stroke Knowledge 911
System Staff Team Unit

69
Module is CompletedProceed to Post Test
70
Post Test
  • Which of the following are types of ischemic
    strokes?
  • Middle cerebral artery occlusion
  • Vertebral-basilar occlusion
  • Lacunar stroke
  • All of the above
  • A vertebral-basilar stroke might have bilateral
    weakness as a symptom. (True or False)
  • This quick stroke assessment scale accurately
    identifies stroke 80 of the time.
    ________________

71
Post Test
  • The family states the patient woke up at 630am
    and exhibited signs of acute stroke. We should
    assume that the stroke started at 630am. (True
    or False)
  • List 4 things the EMS Provider should be able to
    tell the Stroke Receiving Center ED about the
    possible stroke patient who just arrived.
  • The IV TPA window of opportunity for treatment is
    how long from symptom onset?
  • The most common type of hemorrhagic stroke is
    caused by a cerebral aneurysm. (True or False)
  • List 5 conditions that can mimic acute ischemic
    stroke.

72
Post Test
  • Which of the following is not a true hemorrhagic
    stroke?
  • Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
  • Subdural Hematoma
  • Intracerebral Hemorrhage (Hypertensive Bleed)
  • 10. The Stroke Receiving Center Emergency Room is
    the stroke system of care. (True or False)

73
Post Test (Answers)
  • d. all of the above
  • True
  • Cincinnati Pre-hospital Stroke Scale
  • False it is the time last seen normal
  • VS FSBS time last seen normal stroke symptoms
    meds the patient takes
  • 3 hours
  • False Intracerebral Hemorrhage (HTN bleed)
  • Bells Palsy Todds Paralysis Subdural
    hematoma hemorrhagic stroke Psychogenic HTN
    Complex Migraine Hypoglycemia etc.
  • Subdural Hematoma
  • False all entities are equally important links
    in the stroke chain of survival.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com