neuro week 4
tonsillar herniation
"Coning": cerebellar tonsils herniate through the foramen magnum
TBI epidemiology
1.7 million 75% mild young males vehicle collisions, falls, violence, sports
cortical/external borderzone
ACA/MCA MCA/PCA
Balint syndrome (simultagnosia)
Bilateral lesion of Parietal lobe. Inability to perceive more than one object at a time. (cant recognize a bunch of dots making a number) Spatial localization reduced - hard time reaching for objects (optic ataxia) Don't move eyes much when focusing attention. hard time moving eyes to focus(oculomotor apraxia)
central herniation
Downward shift of the diencephalon through the tentorial notch/incisura
junctional adhesion molecules
Ig type
secondary TBI injury
NT release- ion channel activation, astrocyte swelling, edema Free-radical generation calcium mediated damage gene activation-caspases mitochondrial dysfunction inflammation mechanisms differ by type of primary injury
Arteriolosclerosis
Narrowing of small arterioles more in white matter thickened and hyalinized(pink,glassy) vessel walls widened perivascular spaces htn, diabetes are risk factors
communicating arteries
anterior- connects the anterior cerebral arteries posterior- ICA with posterior cerebral artery
1 month mortality of strokes
ischemic-5% hemorrhagic- 50%(half in first 2 days) SAH- 10-20% in first dfew days
Man in a Barrel Syndrome
watershed infarct
Blood-CSF barrier
*fenestrated endothelium* *thin basement membrane* single layer of cuboidal epithelial cells next to choroid plexus epithelium
Perimesencephalic SAH
-Nonaneurysmal SAH -hemorrhage confined to area around midbrain and pons(in front) -no definable cause based on angiography
Romberg test
-ask client to stand with feet at comfortable distance apart, arms at sides, and eyes closed -expected finding: client should be able to stand with minimal swaying for at least 5 seconds
Moyamoya
-progressive stenosis of intracranial ICA with proliferation of lenticulostriate collaterals -puff of smoke appearance on angiography -FLAIR ivy sign -child --> sickle cell, watershed infarct -adults --> bleed, aneurysm formation in posterior circulation -NF, Down's sx, prior radiation
ICP management teirs
1- head position, sedation, CSF drainage, 2- mannitol, hypertonic saline, hypothernia, paralysis 3- pentobarbital, decompressive craniectomy
SAH risk factors
1/3 age family Hx connective tissue disease, PCKD coarctation of the aorta 2/3 cigarettes HTN ETOH Cocaine HTN nost strongly correlated w/ rupture, correlated w/ development
pts post stroke
10% get worse 1% have recurrent stroke 34% silent ischemia on MRI
glasfow coma rankings
13-14 mild 9-12- moderate severe- 8 or less
IMPORTANCE OF tia
15% OF STROKES preceded by TIA dangerous in old, diabetic, HTN unilateral weakness lasting more than 1hr
edema peak in stroke
2-4 days starts after a couple hours
% of clots of cardiac origin
20% tend to be large or multifocal
severe TBI outcomes
20% mortality little improvement with time impaired cognition and function
neurological deficts begin at
20ml per 100g a min
CSF production
3-4x turnover a day 70% choroid plexus interstitial- virchow Robin spaces ependemya
CSF composition
50/50 intercranial and spinal 0-5 cells/MM-no RBC/PMN constant ion composition- hypertonic
ICP goals
<22 mmHG CPP- 60-70
cavernous sinus
A sinus containing venous blood located on each side of the body of the sphenoid bone, near the base of the brain, behind the bridge of the nose
superior sagittal sinus
A venous sinus located in the midline just dorsal to the corpus callosum, between the two cerebral hemispheres.
subventricular stem cells
A- neuroblasts B- slow dividing stem cells B1. subependymal. contact CSF via primary cilium B2 C- fast dividing transit amplifying stem cells
decreasers of CSF production
ANP, AVP, androgenics, acetazolamide, furosemide.,
Right MCA stroke(non-dominant)
Apraxia -idiomotor -eyelid -ideational(cant draw, cant use pen) Hemineglect -visual(wont acknowledge someone standing in that left visual field) -sensory(touch both sides, only recognize right sided touch)
gemistocytes
Astrocytes that respond to injury by increasing their cytoplasm. They may also become multinucleated.
Left superior MCA stroke
Brocas area -expressive aphasia FEF -ipsilateral(left) gaze deviation PMC/PSC -contralateral (right) hemiplegia & sensation loss
CPP formula
CPP = MAP - ICP approximates CBF
SAH diagnosis
CT if shortly after onset\ falls to 50%sensitivity at 7 days Lumbar puncture -xanthochromia at 12 hours to 2 weeks elevated RBC count in last tube angiography after confirmation(80-85%SUCCESS)
epidural hematoma radiography
CT- biconvex, lenticular/lentiform, hyperdense clot constricted by suture lines
CT vs MRI in stroke
CT- subtle and hours DWMRI- minutes. restricted diffusion of water
delayed cerebral ischemia treatment
Ca channel blocker (nimodipine)- prophylaxis hemodynamic therapy- after aneurism secured angioplasty intraarterial vasodilators
Amyloid angiopathy cerebral hemorrhage
Can cause intracranial, frequently lobar(esp posterior), hemorrhage. Amyloid deposits within media and adventitia of medium size and small cortical arteries. Not associated with systemic vascular amyloidosis. Affects elderly pften w/ dementia.
cerebral herniation
Central uncal subfalcine tonsillar
Lipohyalinosis
Defn: Process of lipids coating the inside of small arteries, gradually narrowing the lumen. disorganized, thickened tissue. fat deposition in the wall causes lacunar strokes HTN/diabetes
hydrocephalus management
Diamox(acetazolamide) lasix(furosemide) osmotic agents -limited effect surgical - shunting (ventriculor or lumbar) -3rd ventriculostomy -preferred usually need surgery
arachnoid granulations
Extensions of the arachnoid mater int dural sinuses, that allow excess CSF to be absorbed by the dural sinuses.
tenecteplase
Fibrinolytic better tpa
most common site of selective neuronal necrosis
Hippocampal CA1
Hypertensive intracerebral hemorrhage
Hyalinization of small vessels/fibrinoid necrosis/microanyeurisms Basal ganglia(putamen), thalamus, pons, cerebellum, lobar white mater - frequent locations - supplied by small penetrating arteries w/o collaterals associated with charcot-bouchard aneurisms
Common sites of atherosclerosis
ICA origin carotid siphon(bend in cavernous sinus) distal vertebral/proximal to mid bassilar
rebleeding risk
ICH 1/3 SAH- common w/o intervention
TBI management
ICP Monro-Kellie CBF/PP O2 negative predictors -SBP<90 age>40 PaO2<60 preserve CBF/MAP, minimize ICP
Monro-Kelly doctrine
ICV= Brain + Blood + CSF volume is fixed
no benefit in stroke
IV heparin steroids neuroprotective agents lowering BP
ICP management
MAss lesion- surgical removal Monro-Kellie -CSF drainage -elevate head (increase venous return) -hyperventilate (vasoconstriction, short term) hyperosmolar therapy -mannitol -hypertonic saline decompressive craniectomy reduce brain metabolism -drugs, EEG hypothermia
ICA syndrome
MCA+ ACA +(PCA-5%) opthalmic artery- amaurosis fugax- transient loss of vision of one eye
active transport in BBB
MDR family removes toxins
mechanism of primary injury in tbi
Macroscopic- shearing of WM tracts contusion intracranial hematoma swelling Microscopic -small vessel rupture cell membrane microporation ion channel dysfunction
Duret hemorrhage
Midline hematoma within tegmentum of rostral pons and midbrai. Associated with descending transtentorial herniation. Due to stretching or tearing of penetrating arteries. may be from herniation
berry aneurysm
Most often found in the circle of Willis in the brain circulation Consists of a small, spherical vessel dilation
Malignant Brain Edema Syndrome
Occurs in young population w/in minutes to hours of a head injury Caused by intracranial clot resulting in diffuse brain swelling w/ little or no brain injury Swelling is the result of hyperemia or vascular engorgement - results in increased pressure
ACA stroke
PMC/PSC-Lower extremities more affected than U.E/Face. Contralateral hemiplegia and sensory loss Paracentral lobule(sensory &motor) -urinary(more)/fecal incontinence(less) Prefrontal cortex/Anterior Cingulate cortex -abulia(decrease in motivation/willingness to do anything. delay or ignore commands)-lose one side -akinetic mutism(lose both/bilateral ACA) Anterior/superior frontal lobe(dominant side) -transcortical motor aphasia utilization behavior(compulsion to use object placed in front of them)
glia limitans
Physical barrier between nervous tissue and pia mater composed of astrocytic processes
posterior circulation stroke areas
Primary visual cortex/association area -contralateral homonymous hemianopia -alexia w/o agraphia -anomia Brainstem(impaired consciousness) thalamus- cognition/memory(right-neglect, left-apasia) -contralateral sensory loss/pain, decreased arousal(VPL/VPM) -Lateral geniculate nucleus -homonymous hemianopsia Left- temporal- memory peduncular hallucinosis
SAH complications
Rebeleeding - 24-48hrs (strop anticoag) -sudden deterioration, raise BP, unresponsive vasospasm- 3-10 days (ca channel blockers, balloon dilation, arterial vasodilators) hydrocephalus- bleed into ventricles, lethargy(extraventricular drain)- global deterioration, sleepy hyponatremia/electrolyte imbalance(isotonic/hypertonic saline)-global deterioration. dont treat w/ fluid restriction delayed cerebral ischemia- focal neurologic deficit. usually days after. ~4
gross signs of recent cerebral infarction
Softness(edema) discoloration, pale or hemorrhagic
cerebellar blood supply
Superior cerebellar artery Anterior inferior cerebellar artery Posterior inferior cerebellar artery off the vertebral, arteries
middle cerebral artery
Supplies entire lateral cortex Largest branch of internal carotid artery down the silvian fissure/lateral sulcus to supply latera frontal, temporal and pariatal lobes and basal ganglia
anterior cerebral artery
The arteries that supply oxygen to most medial portions of frontal lobes and superior medial parietal lobes; strokes here can affect leg use
Amaurosis fugax
Transient partial or complete loss of vision in one eye. curtian up and down
uncal herniation
Uncus of the temporal lobe is displaced downward Creates pressure on CN III, posterior cerebral artery, and RAS(fixed and dilated pupil). can push on corticospinal tracts- contralateral hemiparesis Mesial temporal structures (uncus, ± hippocampal gyrus) herniate over the tentorial edge
MCA-PCA watershed infarct
Vision -prosopagnosia(visual association) -Balint syndrome -optic ataxia
brocas area receives input from
Wernicke's and Anterior/Superior frontal lobe.
germinal matrix
a group of thin-walled blood vessels and cells within the subependymal layer of the fetal brain responsible for brain cell migration during fetal development
temporary loss of unilateral vision due to blockage
amaurosis fugax
Subhyaloid hemorrhage
an intraocular collection of blood that remains contained in a self-created, previously nonexistent space, usually between the posterior limiting layer of the vitreous and the retina.
secondary stroke prevention
antiplatelet therapy anti-HTN statins oral anticoag if afib endarterectomy if severe ICA stenosis smoking cessation
CSF clearance
arachnoid granulations and nerve sheaths
penumbra
area of brain tissue surrounding infarct that is ischemic but can be rescued if bloodflow is promptly restored.
regulators of cerebral blood flow
arterial CO2 Arterial O2 neuronal activity
mediators of BBB opening
astrocytes neurons bradykinan, 5-HT, thrombin, free radicles
return to play
asymptomatic at rest and w/ exertion cognitive baseline rehab stage 1-6
gross signs of remote infaction
atrophy cavitation tract degeneration gliotic rim hydrocephalous ex vacuo (compensatory ventricle enlargement)
genetic defects in cilia
bardet-Biedle (hydrocephalus) Joubert (cerebellar malformation) PCKD
pediatric germinal matrix and intraventricular hemorrhage
before 29 weeks fragile microvasculature poor hemostatic capability impaired autoregulation first few days of life- nonspecific findings dx- ultrasound
driver of ionic balance in CSF
bicarb from carbonic anhydrase
Xanthocromia
bilirubin in csf
Coup-contrecoup
blow to the head that causes a contusion at site of impact(coup) and hits brain to opposite side of head (contrecoup)
Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA)
brief episode of loss of blood flow to the brain, usually caused by a partial occlusion that results in temporary neurologic deficit (impairment); arbitrary timeline of less than 24 hrs. most less than an hour NO EVIDENCE OF ACUTE INFARCTION
adherens junction proteins
cadherin catenin bind to actin
inferior MCA stroke
can affect Wernicke's area (left) -receptive/fluent aphasia optic radiations -homonymous hemianopsia
acetazolamide inhibits
carbonic anhydrase
Acetazolamide
carbonic anhydrase inhibitor
Charcot-Bouchard aneurysms
caused by hyaline arteriosclerosis; can result in intracerebral hemorrhagic stroke A Charcot-Bouchard aneurysm is a rare brain microaneurysm, a bulge in the wall of a tiny (less than 300 micrometers in diameter) artery. It most frequently affects the lenticulostriate branches of the middle cerebral artery, which supply blood to the basal ganglia, thalamus, pons, and cerebellum in the brain associated w/ hypertensive hemorrage
autoregulation
changes in cerebral perfusion pressure from 60-150 have little effect on cerebral blood flow vessels will dilate until maximum dilation. then if MAP continues to drop they can collapse DILATION
BBB present except
choroid plexus, circumventricle organs (pineal gland)
tight junctions proteins
claudin and occludin, zonulla occuldin attach to actin
ICH enlargement
clinical deterioration poor outcome 1/3 of pts usually happens in 1st 12 hours
rim on CT from hemmorage
clot retraction
subdural hematoma radiography
concave/cresent. hyperdense diffuse. crosses suture lines- its below adhesions may be layered along falx or tentorium
bulging fontanel indicates
cranial sutures have separated due to increased icp
ICH happens because
damaged blood vessels, not anticoag anticoag makes bleed area larger
Traumatic contusion
deceleration causes brain to impact bony prominences blossom overtime
HTN effect on autoregulation
decompensate earlier in drops of MAP in regards to cerebral blood flow
surgical indications for depressed scalp fracture
depressed more than width of skull bone communitive- multiple fragments open fracture
axonal retraction ball
diffuse axonal injury
Subfalcine herniation
displacement of cingulate gyrus under the falx cerebri -> compression of branches of anterior cerebral artery -> ischemic injury of primary motor and/or sensory cortex -> weakness and/or sensory abnormalities in leg
hyponatremia from bleed
dont treat w fluid restriction give NS or hypertonic saline
deterioration after ischemic stroke
edema, hemorrhagic transformation,infarct extension, infection/fever
mechanism of atherosclerosis causing strock
embolic is most common can be hemodynamic
BBB structure
endothelial(primaru) - no fenestrations, lots of tight junctions -sparse pinocytosis pericytes- support/regulate astrocytic end-feet -indirect contribution
CSF-brain barrier
ependyma in ventricles pia in subarachnoid space
layers of head
epidermis dermis calvarial bone endosteal and meningeal dura (pachymeninx) arachnoid mater (trabeculae_subarachnoid space)+ pia mater = leptomeninx) pial BM glial limitans
types of intracranial hemorrhage
epidural, subdural, subarachnoid*, intracerebral* *stroke primary ICH, traumatic ICH, hemorrhagic transformation
Second Impact Syndrome
exponential increase in symptoms from a concussion following the immature return of an athlete back into competition prior to symptoms being resolved - may trigger malignant brain edema
chronic traumatic encephalopathy
form of dementia caused by repeated head trauma such as concussions. behavior, cognitive, motor, histological amyloid beta and tau pathology
stroke recovery
generally plateaus at 3 months
glucose transport across BBB
glut 1 facilitated diffusion
common places for emboli to lodge in brain
grey-white junctions inter-arterial watershed zones
ICH tx without clear benefit
hemostasis surgery for deep ich treating icp bp lowering
factors determining damage due to ischemia
how low blood flow gets how long it stays low collateral circulation
Watershed/borderzone infarct
hypotension/hypoperfusion at zones between arterial territories Internal borderzone is most common- superficial and deep perforating arteries of MCA
reverse cerebellar sign
hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy - will have diffuse gray-white matter de-differentiation with relatively normal perfusion to the posterior fossa. cerebellum brighter on CT pic with occipital subdural hematoma and deep nuclear grey is brighter than surrounding cortical tissue- ominous finding
Apraxia
impaired ability to carry out motor activities despite intact motor function and willingness to carry out task.
Prosopagnosia
inability to recognize familiar faces
secondary defense measure for brain w/ reduced perfusion
increase % O2 extraction. baseline is 30-40% can double
activators of CSF production
increased cerebral blood flow CO2 volatile anesthetics colinergics NTs
clopidogrel
inhibits ADP binding to platelet receptor
dipyridamole
inhibits phosphodiesterase
Asparin
inhibits thrombaxane
most common infarct area for watershed/borderzone
internal borderzone- deep and superficial perforating arterial territories of MCA (white matter)
carotid arteries
internal- has bulb and larger diameter. distal branches after cavernous sinus. anterior 2/3 of cerebral hemispheres. external- branches early
hemorrhagic transformation
is thought to occur as a result of blood vessel spasm around a blood vessel that has been occluded by a blood clot, which in time resolves, causing the blood clot to break apart and restoring blood flow to surrounding ischemic and infarcted brain tissue. During ischemia, tissues may become friable or fragile, and when normal blood flow or pressure is reestablished, this pressure may cause tissue damage or bleeding. or caused by clotbusting medication around 10% of strokes undergo hemorrhagic transformation. 1% are symptomatic. tissue is already dead. only associated with poor outcomes when exerts a mass effect..
global hypoxia mechanisms
ischemic - cardiac arrest, hypotension, high ICP hypoxic -hemmorage/anemia(quantity) or -RA, status epilepticus, CO posioning (dec O2) histotoxic - cyanide
brain bleeds most common cause
ischemic stroke- atherosclerosis(HTN) ICH- prolonged HTN, abnormal arteries (AMYLOID, Moyamoya, avm)
RACE AND stroke
ischemic- AA> HA > whites primary hemorrhagic Asian >> AA/HA > white SAH SAH- japan and Finland ICH/ischemic stroke >> age. SAH only slightly
mechanism of subdural hematoma
laceration of bridging vessel. accelleration/deceleration or rupture of parenchymal hematoma and bleeding into sub dural space.
characteristics of small vessel infarcts
lacunar, smaller territory
predictors of hemorrhagic transformation
large lesion cardioembolic source hyperglycemia thrombolytic tx
Tpa less effective
larger vessel, longer clot
CSF circulation
lateral ventricles -> foramen of Monroe third ventricle -> aqueduct of Sylvius 4th ventricle -> foramens of Lushka and Magendie subarachnoid space-> arachnoid granulations driven by hydrostatic pressure/CSF production arterial pulsations cilia
arteries supplying basal ganglia
lenticulostriate
subventricular zone
lining of lateral ventricles. contains neural stem cells
small vessel disease comprable to atherosclerosis
lipohyalinosis
small artery disease comparable to atherosclerosis
lipohyalinosis lenticulostriate arteries
diffuse cerebral edema
loss of autoregultion Vasogenic edema is defined as extracellular accumulation of fluid resulting from disruption of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and extravasations of serum proteins, while cytotoxic edema is characterized by cell swelling caused by intracellular accumulation of fluid. loss of grey and white matter distinction
mild-moderate TBI outcome
low/no mortality > GCS 8 memory deficit behavioral disorder academic difficulty usually improves with time/adapt
microscopic findings of subacute phase cerebral infarction
macrophages proliferative capillaries
microscopic signs of chronic phase cerebral infarction
macrophages reactive astrocytes(astrocytosis/gliosis) cavitation
Choroid plexus functions
make CSF brain homeostasis trophic factors of stem cells immune-cytokine production
small vessel infarcts common cause and location
may be due to arteriolosclerosis preferentially affect - basal ganglia, thalamus, pons, hemispheric white matter
hypotension+ anemia/hypoxemia
may need earlier intervention w/ transfusion to maintain cerebral perfusion
proximal vessel clot tx
mechanical clot retrieval within 6 hours with or without TPA
function of CSF
mechanical support nutrient/waste from metabolism and synapses endocrine/paracrine
subdural hematoma facts
more lethal than epidural usually higher impact 24% of severe Head injuries usually vehicular anticoag is a risk factor- occurrence + mortality 50-90% mortality
epidural hematoma facts
more males 1-3 % of head trauma admissions usually temporal -skull fracture(absorbs a lot of impact) 20-55% mortality
cilia
motile- 9+2 primary- 9+ 0
hydrocephalus types
non-communicating (obstructive)- tumor, stenosis communicating(reduced absorption)- infection, subarachnoid hemorrhage- scarring of arachnoid villi overproduction of csf- rare, chorid plexus papilloma
ICP management principles
norma; <15 tx goal <22
Cerebral Venous Thrombosis
occurs when there is a blood clot in one of the dural sinuses; most common in women in their 30s superior sagittal sinus or cortical veins can result in ischemic stroke and intracerebral hemorrhage(increased venous pressure)
Classic epidural hematoma presentation
only 12% LOC lucid interval deterioration -coma -contralateral hemiparesis -ipsilateral pupil dilation
BBB transport
paracellular aqueous transcellular lipophilic transport proteins receptor mediated transcytosis absorptive transcytosis lipophilic mocules easily cross
Decompressive craniectomy
part of skull removed to allow the brain to swell lower mortality higher rate of severe disability
vascular sources of emboli
plaque rupture/thrombus peripheral vessels - neoplasm, fat emboli
glasgow coma scale
predicts severity of injury, not outcome Eye, motor and verbal components minimum score - 3 max-15
hemorrhagic infarct vs primary hemmorage
primary hemorrhage- big colt of blood. no brain tissue inside. 10% of strokes hemorrhagic infarct- revascularization into damaged blood vessels. blood seeps into brain tissue. about 10% of infarcts undergo hemorrhagic transformation. often from clot-busting medicine)
injury with TBI
primary- external force secondary-hours to days
delayed cerebral ischemia
progressive segmental narrowing of blood vessels at base of brain. vasospasm 1/3 of pts post SAH 4-10 days after Risks- large bleed, poor clinical grade at onset
inability to recognize faces
prosopagnosia
embryonic CSF and nanovesicles
protein/micro RNAs for stem cell prolif/diff/migration
MCA-ACA watershed infarct
proximal UE and Proximal LE weakness/hemiplegia and sensory loss. - man in a barrel syndrome
tissue window
pts imaging and symoptoms show small infarction but larger ischemic window. should treat even if its past normal 6 hour window
brain regions most susceptible to low blood flow
purkinje cells(cerebellum), hippocampus CA1, cortical layers 3,5,6 neurons die first, then glia, then vessels
most common intracerebral hemorrhage sites
putamen, basal ganglia, thalamus, pons, cerebellum, lobar white matter
SAH deterioration
rebleeding delayed cerebral ischemia(days after)-focal neurologic deficit(vasospasm) hydrocephalus electrolyte disturbance-hyponatremia
microscopic finds of acute phase cerebral infarction
red dead neurons(pyknotic nucleus, retracted from neuropil) neutrophils microvacuoles(in neuropil)
concussion tx
rest- 2nd injury b4 first has healed is bad avoid concentration/stimulation aviod medicines that can alter mental status thorough eval - neuropsychologist
diffuse axonal injury
rotational force hemorrhagic foci in corpus callosum, brainstem, corona radiata
ICH symptoms
same as stroke but with mass effect- AMS, headache, vomiting symptoms maximal at onset seizures if in cortex
abusive head trauma symptoms
seizures, not breathing/gasping, limp, unresponsive shear strain injury best case - minor to moderate disability
ischemic stroke vs intracerebral hemorrage
signs of increased intracranial pressure in ICH ischemic stroke has edema. large strokes will have latent significant edema- which can raise ISC. but onset will be delayed compared to hemorrhage.
Amyloid angiopathy cerebral hemorrhage
small arterioles, posterior lobar or lobar older dementia pts
Lacunar infarcts
small ischemic infarcts involving the deep brain structures (basal ganglia and pons) and subcortical white matter (internal capsule, corona radiata).k They are most often due to hypertensive aterioslclerosis of small, penetrating arterioles. May sound very similar to a Charcot-Bouchard aneursm with hemorrhage but this would appear hyperdense on CT whereas lacunar infarct would be dark and cavitary (lacuna)
lenticulostriate arteries
small, deep penetrating arteries that branch from the middle cerebral artery. basal ganglia and internal capsule susceptible to lacunar infarcts
choroid plexus ion directions
sodium, bicarb, chloride, water into csf potassium to blood
optic ataxia
spatial disorientation in which the patient is unable to accurately reach for objects using visual guidance
cerebellar ataxia
staggering, wide-based gait; difficulty with turns; uncoordinated movement with positive Romberg sign fail finger to nose
clot density on CT
subacute-isodense chronic- hypodense acute-hyperdense pic is isodense
glymphatic pathway
subarachnoid fluid following paraarterial routes through aquaporin 4 astrocytes to para venous route paravascular pathway/conductive bluk flow can clear out solutes
shaken baby triad/abusive head trauma
subdermal hematoma hypoxic-ischemic brain injury retinal hemorrhage mixed-density subdermal hematomas- multiple injuries over time
associated with abuse
subdural hematoma cerebral ischemia skull fractures + intracranial injury seizures, apnea retinal hemorrhage long bone or rib fracture
subdural vs epidural mechanics
subdural-shearing injury. brain moving within cranium. bridging veins lacerate from brain momentum/immovability. associated with retinal hemorrhage, increased ICP, cervical strain epidural- direct impact on skull- skull fracture lacerates middle meningeal artery(most common artery)
MCA strokes affect
superior division- PMC/PSC- contralateral hemiplegia and sensory loss, face and upper extremities. FEF- ipsilateral gaze deviation inferior division- Wernicke's area(left side MCA)
posterior cerebral artery
supplies occipital lobe, midbrain, thalamus, inferior temporal lobes
endoscopic 3rd ventriculostomy
target: tuber cinereum- into the prepontine cistern ETV
mechanism of epidural hematoma
tearing of meningeal artery. sometimes middle meningeal vein or dural sinus bleeding dissects between dura and brain
carotid endarterectomy
the surgical removal of the lining of a portion of a clogged carotid artery leading to the brain indicated in > 70% blockage in women >50% men no benefit w/o stroke or less than 50% blockage
cardiac sources of emboli
thrombus- Afib endocarditis-infections or noninfections calcific material from valve- rheumatic heart disease
Signs of SAH
thunderclap headache-max intensity within 1 min neck pain/stiffness CN deficit-esp 3(posterior communicating artery aneurism) loss of consciousness sentinel headache subhyaloid hemorrhage
cortical blindness
total or partial loss of vision in a normal-appearing eye caused by damage to the brain's occipital cortex PCA stoke sometimes pt will deny
nonfluent speech, intact comprehension and repitition.
transcortical motor aphasia -ACA
ICP Homeostasis
translocation of intra cranial venous blood to extracranial vessels translocation of CSF to extracranial vessels via acachnoid translocation of CSF to spinal subarachnoid space molding of brain to mass, reduction of ECF space brain shift / extrusion / herniation
concussion
traumatically-induced transient disturance of brain function.
global aphasia stroke
usually complete MCA
subarachnoid hemorrhage from trauma
usually in sulci most common form of SAH
site of clot formation in afib
usually left atrial appendage
Spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage
usually rupture of an aneurism at the base of the brain 3-5% of strokes usually cerebral aneurism usually circle of Willis branches or bifurcation of ICA
if ICP rises(autoregulation)
vessels dilate MAP constant usually impaired in anemia or hypoxemia (vessels alredy dilated)
watershed infarct vs superior sagittal venous thrombosis
watershed- see evidence at MCA/PCA and ACA/MCA superior sagittal VT- larger, less defined. clot at superior sagittal sinus.
CSF into venous system
when ICP > central venous pressure by 3-6 cm H@)
on imaging blood in the brain
will always have a signatre. use different MRI phases to determine age
IV tpa timing
within 4.5 hours increases likelihood of functional independence increases chance of ICH, but not mortality(those patients already had a poor prognosis) still only about 30% effective
hyperventilation to reduce ICP
works short term. but loses effectiveness over hours. then theres rebound if its prolonged response bunted in setting of ischemia (vessels already dilated)