1 / 81

STROKE

STROKE. a.k.a. Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA) & Brain Attack. Stroke. Ischemia is inadequate blood flow Occurs when ischemia to part of the brain results in death of brain cells. Stroke. Movement, sensation, or emotions controlled by affected area are lost or impaired

acarlin
Download Presentation

STROKE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. STROKE a.k.a. Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA) & Brain Attack

  2. Stroke • Ischemia is inadequate blood flow • Occurs when ischemia to part of the brain results in death of brain cells

  3. Stroke • Movement, sensation, or emotions controlled by affected area are lost or impaired • Loss of function varies with location and extent of damage

  4. Stroke • Brain attack • Term increasingly being used to describe stroke and communicate urgency of recognizing stroke symptoms and treating their onset as a medical emergency

  5. Risk FactorsNonmodifiable • Age • Gender (women more likely to die) • Race (African Americans) • Heredity

  6. Risk FactorsModifiable • Asymptomatic carotid stenosis • Diabetes mellitus • Heart disease, atrial fibrillation • Heavy alcohol consumption • Hypercoagulability • Hyperlipidemia

  7. Risk FactorsModifiable • Hypertension • Obesity • Oral contraceptive use • Physical inactivity • Sickle cell disease • Smoking

  8. Etiology and Pathophysiology • Brain requires continuous supply of O2 and glucose for neurons to function • If blood flow is interrupted • Neurologic metabolism is altered in 30 seconds • Metabolism stops in 2 minutes • Cell death occurs in 5 minutes

  9. Etiology and Pathophysiology • Atherosclerosis is a major cause of stroke • Can lead to thrombus formation and contribute to emboli

  10. Sites for Atherosclerosis Fig. 56-2

  11. Etiology and Pathophysiology • Around the core area of ischemia is a border zone of reduced blood flow where ischemia is potentially reversible • If adequate blood flow can be restored early (<3 hours) and the ischemic cascade can be interrupted • less brain damage and less neurologic function lost

  12. Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIA) • Temporary focal loss of neurologic function caused by ischemia (analogous to angina in CAD) • Most resolve within 3 hours • May be due to micro-emboli that temporarily block blood flow • A warning sign of progressive cerebrovascular disease

  13. Types of Stroke • Classification based on underlying pathophysiologic findings • Ischemic • Thrombotic • Embolic • Hemorrhagic

  14. Major Types of Stroke Fig. 56-3

  15. Ischemic Stroke • Result of inadequate blood flow to brain due to partial or complete occlusion of an artery • Constitute 85% of all strokes • Most patients with ischemic stroke do not have a decreased level of consciousness in the first 24 hours • Symptoms often worsen during first 72 hours d/t cerebral edema

  16. Ischemic Stroke • Thrombotic stroke • Thrombosis occurs in relation to injury to a blood vessel wall → blood clot • Result of thrombosis or narrowing of the blood vessel • Most common cause of stroke

  17. Ischemic Stroke • Thrombotic stroke • Two-thirds are associated with HTN and diabetes • Often preceded by a TIA

  18. Ischemic Stroke • Embolic stroke • Embolus lodges in and occludes a cerebral artery • Results in infarction and edema of the area supplied by the vessel • Second most common cause of stroke

  19. Ischemic Stroke • Embolic stroke • Majority of emboli originate in heart, with plaque breaking off from the endocardium and entering circulation • Associated with sudden, rapid occurrence of severe clinical symptoms

  20. Ischemic Stroke • Embolic stroke • Patient usually remains conscious although may have a headache • Recurrence is common unless the underlying cause is aggressively treated

  21. Hemorrhagic Stroke • Account for approximately 15% of all strokes • Result from bleeding into the brain tissue itself or into the subarachnoid space or ventricles

  22. Hemorrhagic Stroke • Intracerebral hemorrhage • Bleeding within the brain caused by a rupture of a vessel • Hypertension is the most important cause • Commonly occurs during activity

  23. Hemorrhagic Stroke • Intracerebral hemorrhage • Often a sudden onset of symptoms that progress over minutes to hours b/c of ongoing bleeding • Manifestations include neurologic deficits, headache, N & V, decreased levels of consciousness, and HTN

  24. Hemorrhagic Stroke • Subarachnoid hemorrhage • Bleeding into cerebrospinal space between the arachnoid and pia mater • Commonly caused by rupture of a cerebral aneurysm

  25. Clinical Manifestations of Stroke • Affects many body functions • Motor activity • Elimination • Intellectual function • Spatial-perceptual alterations • Personality • Affect • Sensation • Communication

  26. Clinical ManifestationsMotor Function • Most obvious effect of stroke • Can include impairment of • Mobility • Respiratory function • Swallowing and speech • Gag reflex • Self-care abilities

  27. Clinical ManifestationsMotor Function • Characteristic motor deficits (contra-lateral) • Loss of skilled voluntary movement • Impairment of integration of movements • Alterations in muscle tone (flaccid → spastic) • Alterations in reflexes (hypo → hyper)

  28. Clinical ManifestationsCommunication • Patient may experience aphasia when stroke damages the dominant hemisphere of the brain • Aphasia: total loss of comprehension and use of language • Dysphasia: difficulty with comprehension and use of language • Classified as nonfluent or fluent

  29. Clinical ManifestationsCommunication • Dysarthria • Disturbance in the muscular control of speech • Impairments in pronunciation, articulation, and phonation; NOT meaning or comprehension

  30. Clinical ManifestationsAffect • May have difficulty controlling their emotions • Emotional responses may be exaggerated or unpredictable • Depression , impaired body image and loss of function can make this worse • May be frustrated by mobility and communication problems

  31. Clinical ManifestationsIntellectual Function • Memory and judgment may be impaired • Left-brain stroke: more likely to result in memory problems related to language

  32. Manifestations of Right-Brain and Left-Brain Stroke Fig. 56-6

  33. Clinical ManifestationsSpatial-Perceptual Alterations • Stroke on the right side of the brain is more likely to cause problems in spatial-perceptual orientation • However, this may occur with left-brain stroke

  34. Clinical ManifestationsSpatial-Perceptual Alterations • Spatial-perceptual problems may be divided into four categories • Incorrect perception of self and illness (may deny illness or body parts) • Erroneous perception of self in space (e.g., neglect all input from affected side; distance judgement)

  35. Clinical ManifestationsSpatial-Perceptual Alterations • Inability to recognize an object by sight, touch, or hearing • Inability to carry out learned sequential movements on command

  36. Clinical ManifestationsElimination • Most problems with elimination occur initially and are temporary • Prognosis for normal bladder function is excellent when only one hemisphere of brain is affected.

  37. Diagnostic Studies • When symptoms of a stroke occur, diagnostic studies are done to • Confirm that it is a stroke • Identify the likely cause of the stroke • CT is the primary diagnostic test used after a stroke

  38. Collaborative CarePrevention • Education and management of modifiable risk factors to prevent a stroke • Close management of patients with known risk factors

  39. Collaborative CarePrevention • Antiplatelet drugs (usually Aspirin) to prevent stroke in those with history of TIA

  40. Collaborative CarePrevention • Surgical interventions for those with TIAs from carotid disease: • Carotid endarterectomy • Transluminal angioplasty • Stenting • Extracranial-intracranial bypass

  41. Add Figure 56-7, p. 1533

  42. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Assessment findings • Altered level of consciousness (See GCS, p. 1500) • Weakness, numbness, or paralysis • Speech or visual disturbances • Severe headache • ↑ or ↓ heart rate • Respiratory distress • Unequal pupils

  43. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Assessment findings • Hypertension • Facial drooping on affected side • Difficulty swallowing • Seizures • Bladder or bowel incontinence • Nausea and vomiting • Vertigo

  44. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Interventions – Initial: ABC • Ensure patient airway • Remove dentures • Perform pulse oximetry • Maintain adequate oxygenation • IV access • Maintain BP according to guidelines • (treat if SBP > 220 or MAP > 130)

  45. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Interventions – Initial • Immediate CT scan to determine cause (ischemic vs hemorrhagic) • Measures to control ICP • Head & neck in alignment (avoid flexion) • Elevate HOB 30 ° if no symptoms of shock or injury • Avoid hip, knee flexion • Pain management, euvolemia, diuretics if needed

  46. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Interventions – Initial • Institute seizure precautions • Avoid hyperthermia ( ↑s cerebral metabolism) • Anticipate thrombolytic/fibrinolytic therapy for ischemic stroke

  47. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Thrombolytic/fibrinolytic therapy with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is used to • Reestablish blood flow and prevent cell death in patients of ischemic stroke

  48. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Thrombolytic/fibrinolytic therapy given within 3 hours of the onset of symptoms • ↓ disability • But at the expense of ↑ in deaths within the first 7 to 10 days and ↑ in intracranial hemorrhage

  49. Collaborative CareAcute Care • For ischemic strokes (24 hr after tPA): • Antiplatelets • Anticoagulants (Heparin, coumadin) • Must maintain therapeutic levels • PTT, INR

  50. Collaborative CareAcute Care • Interventions – Ongoing • Monitor vital signs and neurologic status • Level of consciousness • Motor and sensory function • Pupil size and reactivity • O2 saturation • Cardiac rhythm

More Related