SLIDE 1 Stroke School for Internists – Part 1
November 4, 2017
- Dr. Albert Jin
- Dr. Gurpreet Jaswal
SLIDE 2 Disclosures
- I receive a stipend for my role as Medical
Director of the Stroke Network of SEO
- I have no commercial disclosures or
conflicts of interest
SLIDE 3 Three Main Objectives
- 1. Obtain a history and examination in five
minutes in the ED
- 2. Identify the stroke syndrome
- 3. Read a plain noncontrast CT scan of
the head and recognize thrombus, infarction, hemorrhage
SLIDE 4
- 1. Stroke History and Exam
SLIDE 5
- The history (~ 3minutes) is focused on
enabling a thrombolysis decision
- The exam (~ 2 minutes) has two main
aims:
– Confirm the clinical suspicion of stroke – Clarify the stroke syndrome and localization
SLIDE 6
- Within 5 minutes there is usually enough
information to diagnose stroke
- This sets up imaging as the decision point
for thrombolysis
SLIDE 7 “Last known well”
- Last seen normal, or last known well is the
time of onset
– Time of onset is not necessarily when the patient was found – Time of onset is not necessarily when there was an abrupt change if the patient changed from having a mild deficit to a severe deficit – “When was the last time today that Mr. Jones was seen to be walking and talking normally?”
SLIDE 8 What are the symptoms?
- Weakness in face, arm or leg
- Speech: Is it aphasia, or something else?
- Sensory and Vision: Do they notice
bilateral stimulation?
- Ataxia: “Felt dizzy”, “Had to hold on to
wall”
SLIDE 9 Chronology
- How quickly did symptoms reach maximal
severity?
– Symptom onset is often described as sudden – But symptoms often worsen after “sudden
– “Sudden onset right face and arm numbness” becomes “Sudden onset right face numbness which got worse over the next 30 minutes and spread to the right arm”
SLIDE 10
- “Did things get worse after you first
noticed problems? How long did it take to get to the very worst?”
SLIDE 11 Medications, Comorbidities, Independence
- Anticoagulants and when taken? Other
meds? Allergies?
- Medical conditions, recent stroke/TIA,
recent trauma or surgery?
- Are they independent at baseline?
– If not independent, can they walk, converse, cognitive impairment?
SLIDE 12 Examination in 3 minutes
- NIH Stroke Scale
- Consciousness
- Gaze, Visual Fields,
Face
clumsy, numb
- Language
- Dysarthria
- Inattention
Start at head Move to arms and legs Back up to the head
SLIDE 13 Let’s practice the NIHSS
- Please pair off and we’ll go through the
examination technique together
SLIDE 14
NIHSS
SLIDE 15
SLIDE 16
SLIDE 17
SLIDE 18
SLIDE 20 Objectives
- Recognize clinical features of anterior circulation stroke involving:
- Middle cerebral artery
- Anterior cerebral artery
- Recognize features of posterior circulation stroke involving:
- Posterior cerebral artery (occipital lobe, thalamus, medial temporal lobe)
- Brainstem (midbrain, pons, medulla)
- Cerebellum
- Recognize four common lacunar stroke syndromes
- Pure motor stroke
- Pure sensory stroke
- Sensorimotor stroke
- Ataxic hemiparesis
- Clumsy hand-dysarthria
SLIDE 21 Anterior Circulation Stroke
- MCA and/or ACA
- Occlusion of the ICA can result in
ischemia in both MCA and ACA territory simultaneously
SLIDE 22 Middle cerebral artery
ischemic stroke occurs in the middle cerebral artery territory
the frontal, temporal, and parietal lobes
involve the basal ganglia through the lenticulostriate arteries
SLIDE 23
a large territory shown in blue on this CT scan image taken at the basal ganglionic level
SLIDE 24
MCA covers a large portion of the hemisphere
SLIDE 25 MCA stroke syndromes
(ie, dominant)
- Right hemiparesis
- Right-sided sensory
loss
hemianopia
- Dysarthria
- Aphasia
- Right hemisphere
(ie, nondominant)
- Left hemiparesis
- Left-sided sensory
loss
hemianopia
- Dysarthria
- Neglect of the left
side of environment
SLIDE 26
Anterior cerebral artery
SLIDE 27 ACA covers the medial portion
SLIDE 28 ACA stroke syndrome
paresis > arm paresis
weakness if both ACAs are involved
executive dysfunction
akinetic mutism if bilateral caudate head infarction
SLIDE 29 Posterior Circulation
– Vertebral arteries – Posterior and anterior inferior cerebellar artery – Basilar artery
posterior inferior cerebellar artery
SLIDE 30 Left PCA infarction on CT
This is a thrombus in the left PCA Medial temporal lobe infarct Medial occipital lobe infarct
SLIDE 31 PCA stroke syndromes
- The most common syndromes involve the
- ccipital lobe, the medial temporal lobe or
the thalamus
– Contralateral homonymous hemianopia – Cortical blindness (bilateral lesions)
– Deficits in long-term and short-term memory – Behaviour alteration (agitation, anger, paranoia)
SLIDE 32 PCA stroke syndromes, cont’d
– Contralateral sensory loss – Aphasia (if dominant side involvement) – Executive dysfunction – Decreased level of consciousness – Memory impairment
SLIDE 33 Brainstem stroke syndromes
- Some of the clinical features seen are:
– Crossed sensory findings (e.g. ipsilateral face and contralateral body numbness) – Crossed motor findings (ipsilateral face, contralateral body) – Gaze-evoked nystagmus
SLIDE 34
Other findings in brainstem stroke
– Ataxia and vertigo, limb dysmetria – Diplopia and eye movement abnormalities – Dysarthria, dysphagia – Tongue deviation – Deafness (very rare) – Locked-in syndrome (can’t move any limb, can’t speak, can sometimes blink
SLIDE 35 Midbrain stroke
- Ipsilateral 3rd nerve palsy
- Contralateral hemiparesis
- f the arm and leg,
sometimes with hemiplegia of the face
SLIDE 36 Pontine stroke
– Horner’s syndrome – 6th or 7th nerve palsy (diplopia, whole side of face is weak) – Hearing loss (rare) – Loss of pain and temperature sense
– Weakness in leg and arm – Loss of sensation in arm and leg
SLIDE 37 Medullary stroke
- Ipsilateral signs:
- Tongue weakness
- Sensory loss in face
- Horner’s syndrome
- Ataxia
- Palate weakness
(dysphagia)
- Contralateral signs:
- Weakness, sensory loss
in arm and leg
dysphagia, dysarthria
Medullary infarct on diffusion-weighted imaging
SLIDE 38 Cerebellar stroke
nausea, vomiting, dysarthria
nystagmus
deterioration in level
SLIDE 39 Cerebellar infarction
resulting in mass effect, herniation and compression of the fourth ventricle
deterioration in level of consciousness
is often necessary in these circumstances
SLIDE 40 Lacunar stroke syndromes
usually arises from infarction in the posterior limb of the internal capsule; course is often stuttering over hours to days:
usually arises from thalamic infarction
SLIDE 41 Lacunar stroke syndromes
can arise from infarcts at the junction between the thalamus and the internal capsule
symptoms consist of weakness and sensory loss with no visual field deficit, aphasia, neglect
SLIDE 42 Lacunar stroke syndromes
- Ataxic hemiparesis
- ften arises from
infarction in the corona radiata
- Ataxia is unilateral and is
in excess of the mild weakness found on exam
SLIDE 43 Lacunar stroke syndromes
is caused by infarction in the pons, but can also
and the internal capsule
weakness with dysarthria and dysphagia occurs with contralateral hand weakness/ataxia, and sometimes weakness in the arm or leg
SLIDE 44 Summary
- MCA stroke: hemiparesis, sensory loss, hemianopia, and either aphasia or
neglect
- ACA stroke: leg weakness and executive dysfunction
- PCA stroke: hemianopia, pure sensory infarct (thalamus), memory
impairment, decreased level of consciousness
- Brainstem strokes: crossed sensory or motor findings, nystagmus, ataxia,
dysarthria, diplopia, vertigo, Horner’s syndrome
- Cerebellar strokes: ataxia, nystagmus, vertigo, nausea, headache and rapid
deterioration in consciousness
- Lacunar strokes: pure motor, pure sensory, sensorimotor, ataxic
hemiparesis, clumsy hand-dysarthria
SLIDE 46 We will learn the following:
- Recognize basic anatomical structures on
a plain CT head
- Recognize acute thrombus in the MCA
- Recognize acute ischemic stroke
- Recognize acute intracranial hemorrhage
SLIDE 47 Reading a plain CT head
- Know the following levels on an axial CT:
– Medulla, Cerebellum, and Vertebral Arteries – Pons, and Basilar Artery – Midbrain, and Proximal Middle Cerebral Arteries – Basal ganglia and Insula – Corona radiata – Centrum semiovale
SLIDE 48 Reading a plain CT head
- It helps to know where you are in the brain
when scrolling through a plain CT head:
– Medulla and Cerebellum – Pons – Midbrain – Basal ganglia – Corona radiata – Centrum semiovale
Medulla Cerebellum Left vertebral artery
SLIDE 49 Pons Basilar artery
SLIDE 50 Midbrain Middle cerebral artery
SLIDE 51 Basal ganglia: Caudate and Lentiform Nuclei Thalamus Insula
SLIDE 52
SLIDE 54
SLIDE 55 Centrum semiovale Central sulcus
SLIDE 56
SLIDE 57 Recognize acute thrombus
- As you review the following slides, recall
that the Midbrain level is where you see the proximal MCA (and distal ICA)
SLIDE 58
SLIDE 59
SLIDE 60
SLIDE 61
SLIDE 62
SLIDE 63 Detecting early cerebral ischemia on CT scan
- Loss of grey-white differentiation
– You may have to adjust the brightness and contrast (the “window width” and “window level”)
- Loss of sulci
- Use the same system every time you look
at a CT for possible acute stroke
– For example, the Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS)
SLIDE 64 Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score
M6
IC
M5 M4 M3 M2 M1
L C
I
C = caudate, L = lentiform, I = insula, IC = internal capsule M1, M2, M3 = anterior, lateral, posterior MCA territory; M4 to M6 are above the lentiform nuclei
SLIDE 65
Right hemiparesis and aphasia: Where is the infarct?
SLIDE 66 Can you see the infarct using ASPECTS?
M2 M5 I
SLIDE 67 Case
- 77 year old female with left hemiparesis,
left homonymous hemianopia, left side sensory loss
SLIDE 68
SLIDE 69
SLIDE 70
SLIDE 71
SLIDE 72
SLIDE 73
SLIDE 74
SLIDE 75
SLIDE 76
SLIDE 77
SLIDE 78
SLIDE 79
SLIDE 80
SLIDE 81
SLIDE 82
SLIDE 83
SLIDE 84
SLIDE 85
SLIDE 86
SLIDE 87
SLIDE 88
SLIDE 89
SLIDE 90
SLIDE 91
SLIDE 92
SLIDE 93
SLIDE 94
SLIDE 95
SLIDE 96
SLIDE 97
SLIDE 98
SLIDE 99
SLIDE 100
SLIDE 101
SLIDE 102
SLIDE 103 Intracranial Hemorrhage
- http://radiopaedia.org/articles/intracranial-
haemorrhage
SLIDE 104
Subarachnoid hemorrhage, acute
SLIDE 105
Lobar hemorrhage, acute
SLIDE 106
Intraventricular hemorrhage, acute
SLIDE 107
Epidural hemorrhage, acute
SLIDE 108
Subdural hematoma, acute
SLIDE 109
Subdural hematoma, chronic
SLIDE 110
Subdural hemorrhage, acute on chronic
SLIDE 111
End of Part 1 of Stroke School