Title: Title text
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2Objective
- Review the Canadian Best Practice Recommendations
for Stroke Care 2006 related to Acute Stroke
Management - Stroke Unit Care
- Brain Imaging
- Blood Glucose
- Acute Thrombolytic Treatment
- Carotid Artery Imaging
- Dysphagia Assessment
- Acute Aspirin Therapy
- Management of Subarachnoid and Intracerebral
Hemorrhage
3Canadian Best Practice Recommendations for Stroke
Care 2006
- Public Awareness and Responsiveness
- Patient and Caregiver Education
- Stroke Prevention
- Acute Stroke Management
- Stroke Rehabilitation and Community Reintegration
- Follow-up and Community Reintegration after
Stroke
4Canadian Best Practice Recommendations for Acute
Ischemic Stroke Management
- Acute Stroke Unit Care
- Brain Imaging
- Blood Glucose
- Acute Thrombolytic Treatment
- Carotid Artery Imaging
- Dysphagia Assessment
- Acute Aspirin Therapy
- Management of Subarachnoid and Intracerebral
Hemorrhage
5Management of Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke
6Objectives
- To review the goals of acute ischemic stroke
management - To review contributing factors to ischemic
damage - Blood pressure
- Blood Glucose
- Body Temperature
- Oxygen saturation
- To review the Best Practice Recommendations
related to assessment - Brain Imaging
- Carotid Artery Imaging
- Dysphagia Assessment
7Objectives
- To review the Best Practice Recommendations
related to interventions - Acute Aspirin Therapy
- Acute Thrombolytic Treatment
- Acute Stroke Unit
- To review the Best Practice Recommendations
related to Mgt of Subarachnoid and Intracerebral
Hemorrhage - To review acute complications of stroke
- Increased intracranial pressure
- Cerebral edema
- Hemorrhagic transformation
- Seizures
- Shoulder pain assessment and treatment
8Goals of Acute Ischemic Stroke Management
- Reduce or minimize ischemic damage
- Reduce cerebral edema
- Prevent secondary complications
- Determine etiology of stroke
- Prevent recurrent stroke
- Facilitate access to rehabilitation and community
reintegration
9Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage
- Blood pressure
- Blood glucose
- Body temperature
- Oxygen saturation
10Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage
Normal Brain Tissue
Dying Brain Tissue
Necrosis
Infarcted Brain Tissue
www.heartandstroke.ca/profed
11Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage Blood
Pressure
- Commonly seen in stroke patients
- Labile and may have spontaneous resolution
- May act as a compensatory mechanism to maintain
cerebral perfusion
12Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage Blood
Pressure
- Blood pressure reduction
- Unclear guidelines, address cautiously
- Measure accurately, continuous monitoring
- AHA/ASA Guidelines recommend
- Initiate treatment if SBPgt220mmHg or DBPgt120mmHg
- tPA candidates Initiate treatment if SBPgt185mmHG
or DBPgt110mmHG - Lower blood pressure by 15-25 within 24 hours
- Medication selection on case by case basis but
consider ability to lower blood pressure quickly
but ability for rapid reversal
13Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage Blood
Pressure
- Timing of restarting blood pressure medications
and selection of medications dependant on neuro
status, stroke mechanism, swallowing ability and
presence of other diseases
14 Blood Glucose Recommendation
- All patients with suspected acute stroke should
have their blood glucose concentration checked
immediately - Blood glucose measurement should be repeated if
the first value is abnormal or if the patient is
known to have diabetes - Hypoglycemia should be corrected immediately
- Markedly elevated blood glucose concentrations
should be treated with glucose lowering agents
(CSQCS, AustralianEvidence Level B-C)
15Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage Blood
Glucose
- Hyperglycemia
- Associated with worse stroke outcomes
- Independent adverse effect on prognosis
- Risk factor for hemorrhagic transformation
- Hypoglycemia
- Associated with focal neurological deficits
- Aphasia, hemiparesis, mental status changes
16Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage Body
Temperature
- Hyperthermia
- Adverse effect on outcome
- May be secondary to a cause of stroke
- Reduction of fever may improve prognosis
17Contributing Factors to Ischemic Damage Oxygen
Saturation
- Hypoxia may exacerbate and worsen ischemic damage
- Consider possible causes of respiratory
compromise - Pneumonia
- Partial airway obstruction
- Hypoventilation
- Atelectasis
- Supplemental oxygen if pulse oximetry lt92
18Brain ImagingCarotid Artery ImagingDysphagia
Assessment
19 Brain Imaging Recommendation
- All patients with suspected acute stroke should
undergo brain imaging immediately - In most instances, the modality of choice is a
non-contrast CT scan - If MRI is performed, the scan should include
diffusion-weighted sequences to detect ischemia,
and gradient echo and FLAIR sequences for
hemorrhage. (CSQCS,RCP,NZEvidence Level B)
20Non-Contrast CT Scan Acute Stroke
21Diffusion Weighted MRI Acute Stroke
22Carotid Artery Imaging Recommendation
- Carotid artery imaging should be performed within
24 hours of a carotid territory TIA or
non-disabling ischemic stroke unless the patient
is not clearly a candidate for carotid
endarterectomy. (CSQCS,BPS-WG,SIGN 14Evidence
Level B)
23Carotid Artery Doppler Ultra Sound
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24 Dysphagia Assessment Recommendation
- All patients with stroke should have their
swallow screened prior to initiating oral intake
of fluids or food utilizing a simple valid
reliable bedside testing protocol.
(CSQCS,SCORE,SIGN 78,NZEvidence Level B) - Patients with stroke presenting with features
indicating dysphagia or pulmonary aspiration
should receive a full clinical assessment of
swallowing by an SLP or appropriately trained
specialist who should advise on safe swallow and
consistency of diet and fluids.
(RCP,CSQCS,SCORE,NZEvidence Level A)
25- Acute Aspirin TherapyAcute Thrombolytic Therapy
- Stroke Unit Care
26 Acute Aspirin Therapy
- After brain imaging has excluded intracranial
hemorrhage, all acute stroke patients should be
given at least 160mg of acetylsalicylic acid
immediately as a one time loading dose
(RCP,NZ,SIGN13Evidence Level A) - In patients treated with tPA, ASA should be
delayed until after the 24 hour post thrombolysis
scan has excluded intracranial hemorrhage
(RCP,NZEvidence Level A) - ASA (50-325mg daily) should then be continued
indefinitely or until an alternative
antithrombotic regime is started (RCPEvidence
Level A) - Dysphagic patients,may be given ASA by enteral
feeding tube or by rectal suppository
(RCPEvidence Level A)
27Acute Thrombolytic Treatment
- All acute ischemic stroke patients should be
evaluated to determine their eligibility for
treatment with intravenous tPA using the criteria
from the NINDS tPA Stroke Study - Administration of tPA should follow the ASA
Guidelines (ASA, CSQCS,RCPEvidence Level A-B) - All eligible patients should receive tPA within
one hour of hospital arrival (CSQCS,RCPEvidence
Level B-C)
28 Acute Thrombolytic Treatment
- Medical Redirect and Repatriation
- Triage
- Eligibilty and exclusionary criteria
- Stroke team
- tPA orders
- Target times
29Acute Thrombolytic TreatmentMedical Redirect
and Repatriation
- Formal medical redirect and transfer agreements
- Ensure identified eligible stroke patients access
to tPA - EMS/Paramedics trained to assess and identify
possible eligible candidates and activate Code
Stroke - Ambulance directed to Regional Stroke Centre
- Information needed estimated time of arrival,
patient symptoms, established time of stroke
onset - Patients not meeting eligibility criteria are
transported to nearest emergency facility - Repatriation agreements
- Facilitate patient care closer to home after
stroke centre care completed
30Acute Thrombolytic TreatmentPre-Hospital Triage
and Eligibility Criteria
- Pre-hospital triage
- Rapid assessment using an acute stroke protocol
with eligibility criteria - Primary and secondary assessment
- Eligibility criteria
- Acute onset of new neurological deficits with
reliably known time of onset and consistent with
cerebrovascular disease in the cerebral
hemispheres - The deficit should be of a severity that would
lead to decreased quality of life - Ability to complete all investigations within the
3 hour window - Informed consent
31 Acute Thrombolytic Treatment Triage
- Emergency department triage
- Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS) Level ll
Emergent - Triage of suspected stroke patients
- Airway, breathing, circulation (ABC)
- Neurological Level of consciousness, limb
weakness, speech impairment, visual disturbance - Quick history Previous functional independence
level - Time of onset Confirmed lt3 hours
32Acute Thrombolytic Treatment Triage and
Exclusion Criteria
- Exclusion criteria (ASA Guidelines 2007)
- Neurological signs that are clearing
spontaneously - Symptoms of stroke that are suggestive of
subarachnoid hemorrhage - Onset of symptoms gt3 hours
- Head trauma or prior stroke within previous 3
months - Myocardial infarction within previous 3 months
- Gastrointestinal or urinary tract hemorrhage in
previous 21 days - Major surgery within the previous 14 days
- Arterial puncture at a noncompressible site in
the previous 7 days - History of previous intracranial hemorrhage
33Acute Thrombolytic Treatment Triage and
Exclusion Criteria
- Exclusion criteria for intravenous tPA (AHA 2007)
- Elevated blood pressure gt185/110 mmHG that does
not respond to treatment - Evidence of active bleeding or acute trauma
(fracture) on examination - Taking oral anticoagulant and INR gt/1.5 ( 1.7)
- Receiving heparin in previous 48 hours with
abnormal aPTT - Platelet countlt100,000mm3
- Blood glucose lt2.7 mmol/L or gt22mmol/L
- Seizure with postictal residual neurological
deficits - CT evidence of multilobar infarction involving
gt1/3 cerebral hemisphere or reveals cerebral
hemorrhage - The patient and family do not give consent for
treatment
34Optimal Stroke Management With tPA Stroke Team
- Benefits
- Reduces time to definitive treatment
- Early notification and mobilization further
reduces time - Critical to rapid diagnosis and treatment
- Composition
- Stage of care
- Stroke expert, emergency or family physician
- Medical, nursing staff, allied healthcare
professionals - Stroke survivor, family, support network central
to team
35Optimal Stroke Management With tPAStroke Orders
- Record stroke onset (last seen normal)
- Vital signs including temperature, O2 saturation,
neuro assessment - Capillary blood glucose
- STAT blood electrolytes, BUN, creatinine,
glucose, CBC, PTT, INR, pregnancy test - 12-lead ECG
- O2 at 2 L/minute by nasal cannula for oxygen
saturation lt92 - IV NS TKVO, Saline lok
- Estimate patients weight (kg)
- STAT noncontrast CT of head
- Activate Code Stroke if lt3 hours
- Minimize invasive procedures, like catheterization
36Optimal Stroke Management With tPA tPA Target
Times
- Rapid coordinated emergency response facilitates
early diagnosis and treatment - Door-to-triage 1 minute
- Door-to-stroke team notification 15 minutes
- Door-to-CT scan 25 minutes
- Door-to-needle 60 minutes
37Adverse Effects of tPA Hemorrhage
- Superficial bleeding
- Observe potential bleeding sites venous
arterial puncture, lacerations, etc. - Avoid invasive procedures during tPA and for 24
hours after - Treat with compression
- Monitor all secretions for bleeding
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Observe for deterioration of neuro status
- If suspected, stop tPA
- Obtain CT scan and coagulation workup
38Adverse Effects of tPA Angioedema
- Risk assessment
- Inquire if patient has had angioedema in past
- Take ACE inhibitor history
- Although angiotensin II (ATII) receptor
antagonists have not been implicated in the
angioedema reaction, caution is advised in
patients reporting a history of ATII antagonist
use
39Adverse Effects of tPA Angioedema
- Monitoring
- Observe for facial, tongue, and/or pharyngeal
angioedema 30 minutes, 45 minutes, 60 minutes and
75 minutes after initiation of IV tPA infusion
and periodically for 24 hours afterwards
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40 Stroke Unit Care Recommendation
- Patients admitted to hospital because of an acute
stroke should be treated in an interdisciplinary
stroke unit. (CSQCS,SCORE,SIGN64 Evidence Level
A)
www.healthsystem.virginia.edu/internet/neurology-t
raining/images/fellowship_stroke/6C_conversation.j
pg
41Stroke Unit Care Recommendation
- Key components
- A stroke unit is a specialized, geographically
defined hospital unit dedicated to the management
of stroke patients (Australian,RCPEvidence
LevelA/1)
42Stroke Unit Care Recommendation
- The core interdisciplinary team should consist of
appropriate levels of medical, nursing,
nutrition, occupational therapy, physiotherapy,
social work and speech-language pathology staff - Additional disciplines may include pharmacy,
(neuro)psychology and recreation therapy
43Stroke Unit Care Recommendation
- The interdisciplinary team should assess patients
within 48 hours of admission and formulate a
management plan - Clinicians should use standardized, valid
assessments to evaluate the patients stroke
related impairments and functional status
(RCP,BPS-WGEvidence Level lll)
44Canadian Best Practice RecommendationsManagement
of Subarachnoid and Intracerebral Hemorrhage
45Management of Subarachnoid and Intracerebral
Hemorrhage
- Patients with suspected subarachnoid hemorrhage
should have an urgent neurosurgical consultation
for diagnosis and treatments (BPS-WGEvidence
Level B) - Patients with cerebellar hemorrhage should have
an urgent neurosurgical consultation for
consideration of craniotomy and evacuation of the
hemorrhage (BPS-WGEvidence Level C) - Patients with supratentorial intracerebral
hemorrhage should be cared for on a stroke unit
(BPS-WGEvidence Level B-C)
46Management of Patients with Acute Ischemic Stroke
Acute Stroke Complications
47Increased Intracranial Pressure and Cerebral Edema
- Typically occurs between 3 and 5 days
- Common with patients who have occlusion of the
stem of the MCA - Early swelling has been attributed to reperfusion
edema and possible effects of tPA (ASA,2007) - Malignant brain swelling patients with large
territorial infarct that swells within 24 hours
causing brain herniation. - Cerebellar infarcts sudden apnea with brain stem
compression and cardiac arrhythmias - Anterior circulation strokes low risk (10-20)
(Alexandrov Grotto,2002 del Zoppo et al, 1998) - Incidence of edema in posterior circulation
strokes in unknown
48Increased Intracranial Pressure and Cerebral Edema
- Few signs predict clinical deterioration
- Multivariate analysis history of hypertension,
heart failure, elevated white blood cell count,
presence of gt50 MCA hypodensity and involvement
of additional vascular territory (Kasner et al,
2001) - Management goal Prevention of further
deterioration
49Increased Intracranial Pressure
- Signs and Symptoms-Early
- ?LOC due to oxygen change and compression of RAS
- Pupil dysfunction due to CN 111 compression
- Motor weakness due to pyramidal tract pressure
- Sensory deficit due to compression of ascending
tracts - Cranial Nerve- extraoccular motor (3,4,6)
compression - Headache
50Increased Intracranial Pressure
- Signs and Symptoms-Late
- ?LOC-coma
- Vomiting due to compression of 4th ventricle and
brainstem - Pupil- larger?fixed
- Hemiplegia
- Posturing-flexion (decorticate), extension
(decerebrate) - Vital signs- widening PP,?HR,RR changes
- Loss of corneal, gag reflexes
51 Cerebral Edema
P pressure
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52Increased Intracranial Pressure and Cerebral Edema
- Management Strategies
- Assessment (Glasgow Coma Scale)
- Fluid restriction
- Treat hypoxia, hypercarbia and hyperthermia
- Elevate HOB 30
- Avoid hypertensive agents that cause vasdilation
- Late Stage hyperventilation, osmotic diuretics,
drainage of cerebral spinal fluid, decompressive
surgery, hypothermia
53Hemorrhagic Transformation
- Many infarcts have some element of petechial
hemorrhage present - More common in 2nd week after stroke and larger
strokes - Location, size and cause of stroke
- Use of all antithrombotics, especially
anticoagulants and thrombolytics increase risk - Management depends on amount of bleeding and
clinical presentation
54Seizures
- Frequency in first few days 2-23
- Management is the same as neurological illness
- Prophylactic anticonvulsants not recommended
55Shoulder Pain Assessment and Treatment
- Assessment should be conducted throughout the
continuum of care - Factors that contribute to or exacerbate shoulder
pain should be identified and managed
appropriately - Staff and caregivers should be educated on
correct handling (RCP,SCOREEvidence Level B) - Consider use of supports for the arm
(RCPEvidence Level A)
56Shoulder Pain Assessment and Treatment
- Joint protection strategies should be instituted
to minimize joint trauma - The shoulder should not be passively moved past
90 degrees of flexion and abduction unless the
scapula is upwardly rotated and the humerus is
laterally rotated (SCOREEvidence Level A) - Overhead pulleys should not be used (Ottawa
PanelEvidence Level A) - The upper limb must be handled carefully during
functional activities (SCORE Evidence Level B) - Staff should position patients, whether lying or
sitting, to minimize the risk of complications
such as shoulder pain (RCPEvidence B)
57Shoulder Pain Assessment and Treatment
- Shoulder pain and limitations in range of motion
should be treated through gentle stretching and
mobilization techniques focusing especially on
external rotation and abduction (SCOREEvidence
Level B)
58Resources
- American Association of Neuroscience Nurses
- www.aann.org
- American Stroke Association
- www.strokeassociation.org
- Brain Attack Coalition
- www.stroke-site.org
- Canadian Hypertension Education Program
- www.hypertension.ca/chep/en/default.asp
- Canadian Stroke Strategy
- www.canadianstrokestrategy.ca
- European Stroke Initiative
- www.eusi-stroke.com
59Resources
- Heart and Stroke Foundation Prof Ed
- www.heartandstroke.ca/profed
- Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada
- www.heartandstroke.ca
- Internet Stroke Centre
- www.strokecenter.org
- National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke - www.ninds.nih.gov
- National Stroke Association
- www.stroke.org/site/PageServer?pagenameHOME
- Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network
- www.sign.ac.uk
- StrokeEngine
- www.medicine.mcgill.ca/strokengine
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