Title: Cerebrovascular Accident
1Cerebrovascular AccidentBrain Attack
- Prof Mohammad Salah Abduljabbar
2Objectives
- Define cerebrovascular accident and associated
terminology - Discuss related pathophysiology and presentation
of various types of stroke - Discuss etiology, risk factors, diagnostics,
management, and outcomes of stroke - Review case studies and nursing diagnoses,
interventions, and goals
3Definition
- Stroke or brain attack is an acute CNS injury
that results in neurologic Symptoms and signs
brought on by a reduction or absence of perfusion
to a territory of the brain. The disruption in
flow is from either an occlusion (ischemic) or
rupture (hemorrhagic) of the blood vessel.
4Incidence Prevalence
- Third leading cause of death in the USA
- 750,000 people/year
- 175,000 die within one year (25)
- Leading cause of long-term disabilities
- 5.5 million survivors (USA)
- 15 to 30 live with permanent disability
5Stroke Statistics
- 15 of adults gt age 50 cannot name a single
symptom of stroke - 13 hours after onset of symptoms is the median
time to presentation - 58 of stroke patients dont present during the
first 24 hours after onset - 52 of stroke patients in the ED are unaware that
they are experiencing a stroke
6Classification
- Cerebrovascular Accident
- Ischemic Stroke
- Thrombotic
- Embolic
- Lacunar infarct
- TIA
- Hemorrhagic Stroke
- ICH
- SAH
7Stroke Knowledge
- MYTHS
- Cant prevent stroke
- Cant treat stroke
- Stroke affects the heart
- Stroke affects the elderly
- Recovery happens for a few months after stroke
- FACTS
- Stroke is preventable
- Stroke is treatable
- Stroke is a brain attack
- Stroke affects anyone
- Stroke recovery occurs throughout life
8(No Transcript)
9Stroke Emergency Care
10Stroke Symptoms
- Sudden numbness or weakness of face, arm or leg,
especially on one side of the body - Sudden confusion, trouble understanding or
speaking - Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes
- Sudden trouble walking, dizziness, loss of
balance or coordination - Sudden severe headache with no known cause
11Other Symptoms
- Sudden nausea, fever and vomiting, distinguished
from a viral illness by rapid onset (minutes or
hours vs. days) - Brief loss of consciousness or period of
decreased consciousness
(fainting, confusion, convulsions or coma)
12Cerebral Ischemia
- Embolism
- Abrupt onset
- Small vascular area
- Focal deficit
- Pure aphasia
- Pure hemianopia
- Acute CT normal
- High recurrence risk
- Thrombosis
- Preceded by TIAs
- Abrupt onset
- Large vascular area
- More complex symptoms
- Acute CT normal
13Thrombotic Stroke
- Occlusion of large cerebral vessel
- Older population
- Sleeping/resting
- Rapid event, but slow progression (usually reach
max deficit in 3 days)
14Embolic Stroke
- Embolus becomes lodged in vessel and causes
occlusion - Bifurcations are most common site
- Sudden onset with immediate deficits
- Hemorrhagic Transformation
15Lacunar Strokes - 20 of all stokes
- Minor deficits
- Paralysis and sensory loss
- Lacune
- Small, deep penetrating arteries
- High incidence
- Chronic hypertension
- Elderly
- DIC
16Lacunar Strokes
- 15 20 of ischemic strokes
- Small penetrating branches of circle of Willis,
MCA, or vertebrobasilar artery - Atherothrombotic or lipohyalinotic occlusion
- Infarct of deep brain structures
- Basal ganglia, cerebral white matter, thalamus,
pons, and cerebellum - From 3 mm to 2 cm
17Lacunar Stroke Syndromes
- Well-defined syndromes
- Pure motor hemiparesis (with dysarthria)
- Pure sensory stroke (loss or paresthesias)
- Dysarthria-clumsy hand (with contralateral face
and tongue weakness) - Ataxia-hemiparesis (contralateral face and leg
weakness) - Isolated motor-sensory stroke
18- Risk factors
- Diabetes
- Hypertension
- Polycythemia
- Variable course progressing over days
- Fluctuating progressing in steps or remitting
- Preceded by TIAs in 25
- Without headache or vomiting
19Remember Lacunar Strokes
20Transient Ischemic Attack
- Sudden, focal neurologic deficit lasting less
than 24 hours, confined to an area of the brain
or eye perfused by a specific artery. - Based on assumption that TIAs do not cause
infarction or other permanent brain injury. - Time criterion is arbitrary.
21Transient Ischemic Attack
- Warning sign for stroke
- Brief localized ischemia
- Common manifestations
- Contralateral numbness/
- weakness of hand, forearm, corner of mouth
- Aphasia
- Visual disturbances- blurring
- Deficits last less than 24 hours (usually less
than 1 or 2 hrs) - Can occur due to
- Inflammatory artery disorders
- Sickle cell anemia
- Atherosclerotic changes
22TIA - Differential Diagnosis
- Anxiety (panic attack)
- Hyperventilation
- Neuropathy (focal)
- Neuropathy (ischemic)
- Vertigo
- Disequilibrium
- Migraine
- Orthostatic hypotension
- Syncope
- Arrhythmias (ischemia)
- Seizures
- Conversion disorder
23Hemorrhagic Stroke Definitions
- Intracerebral hemorrhage
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Parenchymal hemorrhage
- Intraparenchymal hematoma
- Contusion
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
24Cerebral Hemorrhage
- Epidural hemorrhage
- Smooth onset
- Arterial origin
- Mass effect causes coma over hours
- Similar (but slower in evolution) to hemorrhage
in basal ganglia
- Subdural hemorrhage
- Smooth onset
- Venous origin
- May be recurrent
- Fluctuating, falsely localizing signs
25Hemorrhagic Stroke
- Rupture of vessel
- Sudden
- Active
- Fatal
- HTN
- Trauma
- Varied manifestations
26Hemorrhagic Stroke
- Intracerebral
- Hemorrhage
- Subarachnoid
- Hemorrhage
27PathophysiologyHemorrhagic Stroke
- Changes in vasculature
- Tear or rupture
- Hemorrhage
- Decreased perfusion
- Clotting
- Edema
- Increased intracranial pressure
- Cortical irritation
28(No Transcript)
29Legs
Voluntary Motor
Mom Bowel/bladder Reasoning/judgment Long term
memory
Sensations Pain Touch Taste
Arms Head
Vision visual memory
Hearing/association Smell taste
Short term Memory
Balance, Coordination of each muscle group
CN 5,6,7,8 P,R, B/P
CN 9,10,11,12 Tracks cross over Coordinate
movement, HR,B/P
30Vessels of the Brain
31Vessels of the Brain
Right Side
32Circle of Willis
33PhysiologyNormal Cerebral Blood Flow
- Oxygen
- Glucose
- 20 of Cardiac Output / oxygen
- Arterial supply to the brain
- Internal carotid (anteriorly)
- Vertebral arteries (posteriorly)
- Venous drainage
- 2 sets of veins - venous plexuses
- Dural sinuses to internal jugular veins
- Sagittal sinus to vertebral veins
- No valves, depend on gravity and venous pressure
gradient for flow
34Risk Factors
- Age
- 2/3 over 65
- Gender
- MF
- Femalegtfatality
- Race
- AA gt hispanics, NA
- Asians gt hem
- Heredity
- Family history
- Previous TIA/CVA
- Hypertension
- Diabetes mellitus
- Heart disease
- A-fib
- Asymptomatic carotid stenosis
- Hyperlipidemia
- Obesity
- Oral contraceptive use
- Heavy alcohol use
- Physical inactivity
- Sickle cell disease
- Smoking
- Procedure precautions
35EtiologyIschemic Stroke
- Atrial fib
- Sinoatrial Disease
- Recent MI
- Endocarditis
- Cardiac tumors
- Valvular heart disease
- Patent foramen ovale
- Carotid/basilar artery stenosis
- Atherosclerotic lesions
- Vasculitis
- Hemostatic regulatory protein abnormalities
- Antiphospholipid antibodies
- Hep cofactor II
36Etiology Hemorrhagic Stroke
- Chronic HTN
- Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy
- Anticoagulation
- AVM
- Ruptured aneurysm (usually subarachnoid)
- Tumor
- Sympathomimetics
- Infection
- Trauma
- Transformation of ischemic stroke
- Physical exertion, Pregnancy
- Post-operative
37Aneurysm
- Localized dilation of arterial lumen
- Degenerative vascular disease
- Bifurcations of circle of Willis
- 85 anterior
- 15 posterior
38AneurysmSubarachnoid Hemorrhage
- SAH
- Mortality 70
- 97 HA
- Nuchal rigidity
- Fever
- Photophobia
- Lethargy
- Nausea
- Vomiting
39Aneurysm/SAH
- Complications
- HCP
- Vasospasm
- Triple H Therapy
- HTN
- Hemodilution
- Hypervolemia
- Surgical treatment
- Clip
- Coil
- INR
40Nursing Management
- Assessment
- Monitoring
- BP
- TCDs
- CBC
- Preventing complications
- Bowel program
- DVT prophylaxis
- Seizure prophylaxis
- Psychological support
- Discharge planning
41Arteriovenous Malformations
- AVM
- Tangled mass of arteries and veins
- Seizure or ICH
42Presentation
- Sudden onset
- Focal neurological deficit
- Progresses over minutes to hours
- HA, N/V, ltltLOC, HTN
- Depends on location
43Treatment of AVM
- Endovascular
- Neurosurgery
- Radiosurgery
44Manifestationsby Vessel
- Vertebral Artery
- Pain in face, nose, or eye
- Numbness and weakness of face (involved side)
- Gait disturbances
- Dysphagia
- Dysarthria (motor speech)
45Manifestationsby Vessel
- Internal carotid artery
- Contralateral paralysis (arm, leg, face)
- Contralateral sensory deficits
- Aphasia (dominant hemisphere involvement)
- Apraxia (motor task),
- Agnosia (obj. recognition),
- Unilateral neglect (non-dominant hemisphere
involvement) - Homonymous hemianopia
46Initial Stroke Assessment/Interventions
- Neurological assessment NIH assessment
- Call Stroke Alert Code
- Ensure patient airway
- VS
- IV access
- Maintain BP within parameters
- Position head midline
- ?HOB 30 (if no shock/injury)
- CT, blood work, data collection/NIH Stroke Scale
- Anticipate thrombolytic therapy for ischemic
stroke
47NIH Stroke Scale Score
- Standardized method
- measures degree of stroke r/t impairment and
change in a patient over time. - Helps determine if degree of disability merits
treatment with tPA. - As of 2008 stroke patients scoring greater than 4
points can be treated with tPA. - Standardized research tool to compare efficacy
stroke treatments and rehabilitation
interventions. - Measures several aspects of brain function,
including consciousness, vision, sensation,
movement, speech, and language not measured by
Glasgow coma scale. - Current NIH Stroke Score guidelines for measuring
stroke severity - Points are given for each impairment.
- 0 no stroke
- 1-4 minor stroke
- 5-15 moderate stroke
- 15-20 moderate/severe stroke
- 21-42 severe stroke
- A maximal score of 42 represents the most severe
and devastating stroke.
48(No Transcript)
49(No Transcript)
50Comic Relief
51Question
- The neurologic functions that are affected by a
stroke are primarily related to - A. the amount of tissue area involved.
- B. the rapidity of the onset of symptoms.
- C. the brain area perfused by the affected
artery. - D. the presence or absence of collateral
circulation.
52Question
- A patient is admitted to the hospital with a left
hemiplegia. To determine the size and location
and to ascertain whether a stroke is ischemic or
hemorrhagic, the nurse anticipated that the
health care provider will request a - A. CT scan.
- B. lumbar puncture.
- C. cerebral angiogram.
- D. PET scan.
53Diagnosis
- Tests for the Emergent Evaluation of the Patient
with Acute Ischemic Stroke - CT head (-)
- Electrocardiogram
- Chest x-ray
- Hematologic studies (complete blood count,
platelet count, prothrombin time, partial
thromboplastin time) - Serum electrolytes
- Blood glucose
- Renal and hepatic chemical analyses
- National Institute of Health Scale (NIHSS) score
-
54Diagnosis
55Medical Management
- BP
- MAP
- CPP
- Factor VII, Vit K, FFP
- ICP
- HOB
- Sedation
- Osmotherapy
- Hyperventilation
- Paralytics
- Fluid management
- euvolemia
- Seizure prophylaxis
- Keppra
- Dilantin
- Sedation
- Body temperature
- PT/OT/ST
- DVT prophylaxis
56Treatment
- Medical management
- TPA
- Endovascular
- Carotid endarectomy
- Merci clot removal
- http//youtu.be/P2TNz-TniIA
- Medical management
- Decompression
- Craniotomy
- Craniectomy
PT/OT/ST REHABILITATION
57Medications
- Anti-coagulants A fib TIA
- Antithrombotics
- Calcium channel blockers Nimotop (nimodipine)
- Corticosteroids ???
- Diuretics Mannitol, Lasix (Furosemide)
- Anticonvulsants Dilantin (phenytoin) or Cerebyx
(Fosphenytoin Sodium Injection) - Thrombolytics - tPA (recombinant tissue
plasminogen activator)
58Medications
- Thrombolytics Recombinant Alteplase (rtPA)
Activase, Tissue plasminogen activator - Treatment must be initiated promptly after CT to
R/O bleed - Systemic within 3 hours of onset of symptoms
- Intra-arterial within 6 hours of symptoms
- Some exclusions
- Seizure at onset
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
- Trauma within 3 months
- History of prior intracranial hemorrhage
- AV malformation or aneurysm
- Surgery 14 days, pregnancy,
- Cardiac cath. 7 days
59Neurosurgical Management
- Craniotomy
- Craniectomy
- EVD placement
- ICP monitor placement
60Recommendations for Surgical Treatment of ICH
- Nonsurgical candidates
- Small hemorrhage
- Minimal deficit
- GCS lt/ 4 (unless brain stem compression)
- Loss of brainstem reflexes
- Severe coagulopathy
- Basal ganglion or thalamic
- Surgical candidates
- gt3cm
- Neuro deficit
- Brain stem compression
- MLS, HCP
- Aneurysm, AVM, cavernous hemangioma
- Young c mod/large lobar hemorrhage c clinical
deterioration
61Reducing Primary Risk
- Obstructive sleep apnea
- Homocysteine ? folate, B6, B12
- Hypertension morning BP surge
- Smoking ? 50 risk reduction in 1 yr
- Hyperlipidemia ? statins
- Migraine ? triptans
- Drugs cocaine, ephedra, PPA
62Reducing Primary Risk
- Asymptomatic carotid stenosis
- Endarterectomy for gt 60 stenosis
- Risk reduction for 3 to 1 per year
- Benefit related to surgical risk
- Nonvalvular atrial fibrillation
- Aspirin for patients lt 65 years, healthy
- Warfarin for patients gt 65 years or having other
stroke risk factors
63Reducing Secondary Risk
- Reducing risk of recurrence
- TIA with ipsilateral carotid stenosis ?
endarterectomy for gt 70 stenosis - Cardiogenic embolism ? warfarin
- Lacunar infarcts ? aspirin, dipyridamole
- Cryptogenic infarcts (40 embolic) ?
anticoagulation?
64Reducing Risk in Children
- Sickle cell disease
- Screen with transcranial doppler q 6 mo
- Transfusion therapy for 2 abnormal studies
- Congenital heart disease
- Arterial dissections (trauma)
- Prothrombotic disorders
- Mitochondria disorders (MELAS)
65Using Statins
- Pooled results after 5 years
- Pravastatin or Simvastatin 40 mg/day
- Changes in cholesterol levels
- Total cholesterol decreased 20
- LDL cholesterol decreased 28
- HDL cholesterol increased 5
- Triglycerides decreased 13
66Using Statins
- Reducing LDL cholesterol by 1 mmol/L
- 22 stroke reduction in patients with known
vascular disease - 6 stroke reduction in patients without known
vascular disease - 28 reduction in thromboembolic stroke
67Complications
- Increased intracranial pressure
- Rebleeding
- Vasospasm
- HCP
- Death
68Outcomes
- Age
- Size, volume
- Location
- HCP, IVH
- Deficit, LOC, MAP
- Duration
- Co-morbidities
69References
- AANN Core Curriculum for Neuroscience Louis, MO.
Nursing, 4th Ed. 2004. Saunders. St. - Broderick, J., et. al. (1999) Guidelines for the
management of spontaneous intracerebral
hemorrhage. AHA. - El-Mitwali, A., Malkoff, M. (2001) Intracerebral
hemorrhage. The Internet Journal of
Neurosurgery. 1.1. - Greenberg, Mark. (2006). Handbook of
- Neurosurgery. Greenberg Graphics,
- Tampa, Florida.