Cerebro vascular Accident (C V A)
  
Definition
Ø  Sudden loss of blood supply to an area of the brain
Ø  Corresponding loss of neurologic function
Ø  TIA vs. CVA
 
Risk Factors
Ø  Age
Ø  Hypertension**
Ø  Prior TIA/CVA
Ø  DM
Ø  Hypercholesterolemia
Ø  Smoking!
Ø  Atrial fibrillation
Causes
Ø  Ischemic
Ø Thrombotic
ØVirchow’s Triad
Ø Embolic
Ø Hypoperfusion
Ø  Hemorrhagic
Ø Primary
Ø Hemorrhagic transformation
 
Virchow’s Triad
Ø  Venous Stasis
Ø Phenomena of interrupted blood flow
Ø  Endothelial Injury
Ø phenomena associated with irritation of vessel and its vicinity
Ø  Hypercoaguability
Ø phenomena of blood coagulation
Hypercoaguability
Ø  Congenital
Ø Antithrombin III deficiency
Ø Protein C & S deficiency
Ø Factor V Leiden
Ø Prothrombin mutation
Ø MTHFR mutation (homocysteine)
Ø Sickle Cell Disease
 
 
Ø  Acquired
Ø Antiphospholipid antibodies
ØAnti-cardiolipin Ab/lupus anticoagulant
Ø HIT
Ø Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria
Ø Nephrotic syndrome
Ø OCP’s
Ø SMOKING!!!
Ø Malignancy
 
Presentation
Ø  Face weakness/asymmetry
Ø  Extremity drift or weakness
Ø  Abnormal speech +/- Aphasia
Ø  Unilateral
Ø  Ataxia +/- Vertigo
Ø  Anosognosia
Ø  Loss of Conciousness
 
 
Major Cerebral Arteries
 
Internal Carotid Artery
Ø  Terminal branch of Common Carotid
 
Ø  Cervical (C1), Petrous (C2), Lacerum (C3), Cavernous (C4), Clinoid (C5), Ophthalmic (C6), Communicating (C7) segments
Ophthalmic Artery Occlusion
Ø  Ocular Ischemic Syndrome
Ø  Usu. Age 50-80
Ø  M:F 2:1
Ø  Dull radiating ache of eye/brow
Ø  Intractable pain (ocular angina)
Ø  Blot retinal hemorrhage/beaded retinal veins
  
Ø  Transient blurred vision
Ø  Retinal artery occlusion
 
Anterior Cerebral Occlusion 
Ø  Frontal lobe, anterior basal ganglia and internal capsule function
Ø  Disinhibition
Ø  Primitive reflex production
Ø  Altered mental status
Ø  L side CVA ® aphasia
Ø  Contralateral weakness (legs>arms)
Ø  Contralateral sensory deficits
Ø  Gait apraxia
Ø  Urinary incontinence
Middle Cerebral Occlusion
Ø  Majority lateral aspect of frontal, parietal lobes, inferior temporal lobe
Ø  Contralateral hemiparesis
Ø  Contralateral sensory deficits
Ø  Ipsilateral/homonymous hemianopsia
Ø  Gaze preference
Ø  Agnosia
Ø  R CVA ® Contralateral Neglect
Ø  Extremity weakness (upper>lower)
 
Posterior Cerebral Occlusion
Ø  Occipital lobe
Ø  Contralateral homonymous hemianopsia with macular sparing
Ø  Cortical blindness
Ø  “Medial Midbrain Syndrome” 
Ø  Altered mental status
Ø  Impaired memory
Ø  “Prosopagnosia” -visual agnosia
Ø  Ipsilateral deficits CN V, VIII, IX, X & XI
Lacunar Occlusion
Ø  Small perforating arteries of deep subcortical areas of the brain
Ø  Lesions occur in deep nuclei of the brain
Ø  Putamen (37%)
Ø  Thalamus (14%)
Ø  Pons (16%)
Ø  Caudate (10%)
Ø  Internal capsule - posterior limb (10%)
Ø  Deep cerebral white matter, anterior limb internal capsule and cerebellum less common)
Lacunar Syndromes
Ø  Pure Motor (30-35%)
Ø Infarction posterior limb internal capsule
Ø Hemiparesis/hemiplegia
Ø Dysarthria
Ø Dysphagia
Ø Transient sensory symptoms
 
Ø  Pure Ataxic
Ø Infarction of posterior limb internal capsule, basis pontis & corona radiata
Ø Cerebellar and Motor symptoms
ØIpsilateral weakness
ØClumsiness
Ø Usually affects leg > arm (homolateral ataxia)
 
Ø  Dysarthria/Clumsy Hand
Ø Variant of ataxic hemiparesis
Ø Infarction in the pons
Ø Dysarthria
Ø Clumsiness of the hand
ØMost prominent when the patient is writing
 
Ø  Pure Sensory
Ø Infarction in contralateral thalamus
Ø Persistent/transient 
ØNumbness
ØTingling
ØPain
ØBurning
ØUnilateral “unpleasant sensation”
 
Ø  Mixed Sensorimotor
Ø Infarction in thalamus & adjacent posterior limb internal capsule
Ø Hemiparesis or hemiplegia
Ø Ipsilateral sensory impairment
 
Treatment
Ø  ABC’s!!
Ø  BP control is SBP >220, DBP >120
Ø Not rapidly!
Ø SBP >185, DBP >110 is contraindication for TPA
Ø Clinically (aim SBP 160-180)
ØWhy?
 
Ø  TPA
Ø Must present within 3 hours of onset of Sx with severe neurologic deficit
Ø Excluded
ØSx suggestive of SAH
ØPrevious Hx intracranial hemorrhage
ØRecent CVA or MI (within 3 mo)
ØRecent head injury (within 3 mo)
ØRecent major surgery (within 14 days)
ØHeparin/anticoagulants (within 48 hours)
ØThrombocytopenia (<100 x9)
ØHypo/hyperglycemia (<50, >400)
 
 
 
Ø  Radiology
Ø  CT Head 
Ø With or without contrast?
Ø r/o intracranial hemorrhage
Ø  Neurology Consult
Ø  Repeat CT 48hrs (r/o hemorrhagic conversion)
Ø  MRI / EEG / Carotid Dopplers / 2D Echo
Ø  Antiplatelets vs. Aggrenox
Ø  Cardiology Consult
Ø  Arrythmia contributer?
Ø  Speech Evaluation
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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