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General Emergent Management of Patients with Stroke, Including Blood Pressure Management

General Emergent Management of Patients with Stroke, Including Blood Pressure Management. Objectives. Review initial evaluation of the patient with an AIS history, physical exam, diagnostics, imaging Discuss acute supportive care

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General Emergent Management of Patients with Stroke, Including Blood Pressure Management

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  1. General Emergent Management of Patients with Stroke, Including Blood Pressure Management

  2. Objectives • Review initial evaluation of the patient with an AIS • history, physical exam, diagnostics, imaging • Discuss acute supportive care • stroke vital signs: ABCC’s, hypertension, glucose, temperature, seizure management • Understand that emergent management requires simultaneous evaluation and intervention

  3. Goals of Acute Supportive Care Assure optimal perfusion and oxygenation • Protect the C-spine • Secure the airway • Support oxygenation and ventilation • Assure appropriate circulation

  4. The History • Age - approximately 65 yr • Sudden onset focal neurologic deficit • Specific vascular territory • Seizure at onset of Sx: 5% • Headache at onset: 10-30% • Fall or trauma at onset

  5. Time of Symptom Onset • Most difficult portion of the history • Start when patient “was last seen normal” • Work forward in time (TV guide) • Patients that awake with symptoms - onset = time of sleep • Confirm with family, friends, care taker • EMS - bring family along in ambulance

  6. Past Medical History • Medications: • diuretic, antihypertensive, antithrombotic • Risk Factors: hypertension TIA smoking previous stroke diabetes atrial fibrillation African-American carotid artery disease

  7. Physical Exam • Vital signs are vital, • but occasionally inaccurate • C-Spine tenderness, pain • BP in both arms, symmetry of pulses • Signs of trauma, associated injuries • Neurologic deficit - characteristic vascular distribution

  8. Stroke Scales • Severity • NIH stroke scale 0-42, 0 = normal valid, reproducible, assists in patient selection, facilitates communication • Functional Scales • m-Rankin 0-5, 0 = normal • Barthel index 100, 100 = normal • Glasgow outcome 0-5, 5= normal • in NINDS t-PA stroke trial, 0 = normal

  9. Stroke Scales • NIH stroke scale 0-42 0-5 mild/minor in most patients 5-15 moderate 15-20 moderately severe > 20 very severe underestimates volume of infarct in non-dominant (R) hemispheric strokes

  10. Diagnostic Testing • Laboratory studies • CBC, differential, platelets • electrolyte profile, glucose (finger stick) • INR, aPTT • Troponin • EKG • CXR

  11. Non-contrast CT of the Head • Initial imaging study of choice • Readily available • Very sensitive for blood in the acute phase • blood - 50-85 Hounsfield Units • bone- 120 (70-200) Hounsfield Units • Not sensitive for acute ischemic stroke • nearly 100% sensitive by 7 days • Posterior fossa structures - bone artifact

  12. Non-contrast CT of the Head • May shows early signs of ischemia in the 1st 3 hours • loss of gray/white matter distinction • hypodensity • mass effect, edema • hyperdense middle cerebral artery sign • Re-evaluate the time of symptom onset, if early signs of ischemia are present

  13. ECT 2 hours 24 hours

  14. Other Imaging Modalities • MRI • standard • DWI/PWI • Xenon CT • Perfusion CT • CT Angiography

  15. Differential Diagnosis • Deciphered by history, PE, diagnostics • DDx: TIA vascular disorders seizure infections (endocarditis) trauma complex migraine mass lesions metabolic abnormalities

  16. Stroke Vital Signs Airway Breathing Circulation C-spine Glucose Temperature

  17. Airway ManagementUpper airway patency • Maintain C-Spine precautions • Asses level of consciousness • Inspect for loose dentures, foreign bodies • Suction secretions • Assess gag reflex, tongue control

  18. Oxygenation and Ventilation • Respiratory rate and depth • Signs of fatigue - Paradoxical respirations • Breath sounds - (CHF, pneumonia, COPD) • Supplemental O2 with O2sat > 95% • Support with Basic airway techniques • Ventilatory support as required

  19. Basic airway techniques • Foreign body removal • Suction with rigid suction device • Positioning • jaw thrust • chin lift • Nasal airway • Bag valve mask

  20. Advanced Airway Management • Rapid sequence intubation, orotracheal • sedation and paralysis prevent increase in ICP • Most common indications • inability to maintain airway • depressed level of consciousness • need for hyperventilation to manage ICP • Treat the underlying cause of respiratory distress: CHF, MI, etc.

  21. Monitoring of oxygenation • Pulse oximetry • indicator of oxygenation not ventilation • falsely high in CO poisoning • falsely low in PVOD, hypotension, peripheral vasoconstriction • ABG • pCO2 allows eval of ventilation • obtain from compressible site • Supernormal oxygenation • not of proven benefit

  22. Circulation • Goal: maintain cerebral perfusion • Optimize cardiovascular status • Monitor and reevaluate

  23. Circulation • Evaluate cardiac history and status • Cardiac output • preload • afterload • contractility • stroke volume

  24. Circulation • Monitor vital signs Q 15 min in acute phase • pulse (palpate in all 4 extremities) • heart rate • rhythm • blood pressure (both arms) • central venous pressure

  25. ECG • Cardiac Arrhythmia: 5% -30% • Acute MI: 1%-2% • ECG abnormalities • more common with hemorrhagic infarct • T-Wave inversions • nonspecific ST and T-wave changes

  26. Vascular Access • Two peripheral IVs • Use .9NS or .45 NS unless hypotensive • Use .9NS if hypotensive • Replace blood products as indicated

  27. Autoregulation • The ability of the vasculature in the brain to maintain a constant blood flow across a wide range of blood pressures • Autoregulation - impaired or lost in the area of the infarction • Ischemic tissues are perfusion dependant • Autoregulation is shifted to higher pressure patients with a history of HTN

  28. Autoregulationof Cerebral Blood Flow

  29. Hypertension Ischemic Stroke • Loss of autoregulation • Treat judiciously if at all • Treatment guidelines - not receiving rt-PA • AHA: MAP > 130 or Sys BP > 220 • MAP= [(2x DP)+SP]B3 • NSA: 220/115

  30. Hypertension - Ischemic Stroke • Drugs - short acting, titrate • Labetalol IV: 10-20 mg increments, double dose Q 20 min, max cumulative dose 300mg • Enalapril Oral: 2.5 - 5.0 mg/day, max 40mg/day IV : 0.625-1.25 mg IV Q 6hrs, max 5.0 Q 6 hrs

  31. Hypertension -Ischemic Stroke • Nitroglycerine Paste: 1-2 inches to skin IV Drip: 5mcg/min, increase in increments of 5-10mcg every 3-5 min • Nitroprusside IV Drip: 0.3 - 10 mcg/min/kg Continuos BP monitoring check thiocyanate levels • AVOID NIFEDIPINE

  32. Hypertension Intracerebral Hemorrhage • Treat aggressively • Elevate head of bed • Use labetalol, nitroglycerine, nitroprusside or lasix • AVOID NIFEDIPINE • Keep systolic < 160 mm Hg diastolic < 100 mm Hg

  33. Hypotension • More detrimental than hypertension • Seek cause and treat aggressively • CVP monitoring may be necessary • Use .9 NS first to ensure adequate preload • Then add vasopressors if needed

  34. Hypertension: rt-PA Candidate • Exclude for persistent BP > 185/110 • Check BP q 15 min • May not aggressively lower BP to meet entry criteria • Use Labetolol or Nitropaste • Avoid Nifedipine

  35. Glucose • Worse outcome after stroke: • diabetics • acute hyperglycemia at time of infarct • Mechanism uncertain • increase in lactate in area of ischemia • gene induction, • increased number of spreading depolarizations • Insulin is a neuroprotective

  36. Glucose • Avoid any IV fluids with D5 • instruct prehospital personnel not to give D50 as part of the “coma cocktail” to acute stroke patients • Check a finger stick ASAP • treat only if low (< 50) • Use insulin to establish euglycemia

  37. Temperature • Fever worsens outcome: • for every 1°C rise in temp, risk of poor outcome doubles (Reith, Lancet 1996) • Greatest effect in the first 24 hours • Brain temp is generally higher than core • Treat aggressively with acetaminophen, ibuprofen, or both • Search for underlying cause • Hypothermia currently under investigation

  38. Seizures • Occur in 5% of acute strokes • Usually generalized tonic-clonic • Possible causes: severe strokes cortical involvement unstable tissue at risk spreading depolarizations hx of seizure disorder

  39. Seizures • Protect patient from injury during ictus • Maintain airway • Benzodiazepines: • lorazepam (1-2 mg IV) • diazepam (5-10 mg IV) • Phenytoin: • 18 mg/kg loading dose, at 25-50 mg/min infusion with cardiac monitor • No need for prophylaxis

  40. Primary treatment of AIS • Supportive care • Aspirin • IV thrombolysis • No role for antithrombotics

  41. Summary Evaluation • History with time of symptom onset • Physical exam • trauma, NIHSS score • Laboratory evaluation • Non-contrast CT head

  42. Summary Supportive Care • Secure airway; basic and advanced methods • Protect C-spine • Assure oxygenation and ventilation • Maximize perfusion, IV fluids • Blood pressures (both arms), treat carefully • Normalize the temperature and glucose • Treat seizure if occurs • Reevaluate

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