1 / 82

Cerebrovascular Accident “Brain Attack”

Cerebrovascular Accident “Brain Attack”. Lisa Randall, RN, MSN, ACNS-BC RNSG 2432. Objectives. Define cerebrovascular accident and associated terminology Discuss related pathophysiology and presentation of various types of stroke

feo
Télécharger la présentation

Cerebrovascular Accident “Brain Attack”

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. Cerebrovascular Accident“Brain Attack” Lisa Randall, RN, MSN, ACNS-BC RNSG 2432

  2. Objectives • Define cerebrovascular accident and associated terminology • Discuss related pathophysiology and presentation of various types of stroke • Discuss etiology, risk factors, diagnostics, management, and outcomes of stroke • Review case studies and nursing diagnoses, interventions, and goals

  3. Definition • Stroke or “brain attack” is an acute CNS injury that results in neurologic S/S brought on by a reduction or absence of perfusion to a territory of the brain. The disruption in flow is from either an occlusion (ischemic) or rupture (hemorrhagic) of the blood vessel.

  4. Definitions • Cerebrovascular Accident • Ischemic Stroke • Thrombotic • Embolic • Lacunar infarct • TIA • Hemorrhagic Stroke • ICH • SAH

  5. Incidence & Prevalence • Third leading cause of death in the USA • 750,000+ people/year • 175,000 die within one year (25%) • Leading cause of long-term disabilities • 5.5 million survivors (USA) • 15 to 30 % live with permanent disability

  6. Stroke: Emergency Care • http://youtu.be/-d8__FkW-nU

  7. Thrombotic Stroke • Occlusion of large cerebral vessel • Older population • Sleeping/resting • Rapid event, but slow progression (usually reach max deficit in 3 days)

  8. Embolic Stroke • Embolus becomes lodged in vessel and causes occlusion • Bifurcations are most common site • Sudden onset with immediate deficits • Embolysis • Hemorrhagic Transformation

  9. Lacunar Strokes - 20% of all stokes • Minor deficits • Paralysis and sensory loss • Lacune • Small, deep penetrating arteries • High incidence: • Chronic hypertension • Elderly • DIC

  10. Transient Ischemic Attack • Warning sign for stroke • Brief localized ischemia • Common manifestations: • Contralateral numbness/ weakness of hand, forearm, corner of mouth • Aphasia • Visual disturbances- blurring • Deficits last less than 24 hours (usually less than 1 or 2 hrs) • Can occur due to: • Inflammatory artery disorders • Sickle cell anemia • Atherosclerotic changes

  11. EtiologyIschemic Stroke Embolism Prothrombotic states Hemostatic regulatory protein abnormalities Antiphospholipid antibodies Hep cofactor II • Atrial fib • Sinoatrial D/O • Recent MI • Endocarditis • Cardiac tumors • Valvular D/O • Patent foramen ovale • Carotid/basilar artery stenosis • Atherosclerotic lesions • Vasculitis

  12. Hemorrhagic Stroke Definitions • Intracerebral hemorrhage • Intracranial hemorrhage • Parenchymal hemorrhage • Intraparenchymal hematoma • Contusion • Subarachnoid hemorrhage

  13. Hemorrhagic Stroke • Rupture of vessel • Sudden • Active • Fatal • HTN • Trauma • Varied manifestations

  14. Hemorrhagic Stroke • Intracerebral Hemorrhage • Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

  15. PathophysiologyHemorrhagic Stroke • Changes in vasculature • Tear or rupture • Hemorrhage • Decreased perfusion • Clotting • Edema • Increased intracranial pressure • Cortical irritation

  16. Etiology Hemorrhagic Stroke • Chronic HTN** • Cerebral AmyloidAngiopathy* • Anticoagulation* • AVM • Ruptured aneurysm (usually subarachnoid) • Tumor • Sympathomimetics • Infection • Trauma • Transformation of ischemic stroke • Physical exertion, Pregnancy • Post-operative

  17. Legs Mom: Bowel/bladder Reasoning/judgment Long term memory Voluntary Motor Sensations Pain & Touch Taste Arms Head Vision & visual memory Hearing/association & Smell & taste Short term Memory Balance, Coordination of each muscle group CN 5,6,7,8 P,R, B/P CN 9,10,11,12 Tracks cross over Coordinate movement, HR,B/P

  18. Vessels of the Brain

  19. Vessels of the Brain Right Side

  20. Circle of Willis

  21. Aneurysm • Localized dilation of arterial lumen • Degenerative vascular disease • Bifurcations of circle of Willis • 85% anterior • 15% posterior

  22. AneurysmSubarachnoid Hemorrhage • SAH • Mortality 70% • 97% HA • Nuchal rigidity • Fever • Photophobia • Lethargy • Nausea • Vomiting

  23. Aneurysm/SAH • Complications • HCP • Vasospasm • Triple H Therapy • HTN • Hemodilution • Hypervolemia • Surgical treatment • Clip • Coil • INR

  24. Arteriovenous malformations • AVM • Tangled mass of arteries and veins • Seizure or ICH

  25. PhysiologyNormal Cerebral Blood Flow • Oxygen • Glucose • 20% of Cardiac Output / oxygen • Arterial supply to the brain: • Internal carotid (anteriorly) • Vertebral arteries (posteriorly) • Venous drainage • 2 sets of veins - venous plexuses • Dural sinuses to internal jugular veins • Sagittal sinus to vertebral veins • No valves, depend on gravity and venous pressure gradient for flow

  26. Risk Factors NON-MODIFIABLE MODIFIABLE Hypertension Diabetes mellitus Heart disease A-fib Asymptomatic carotid stenosis Hyperlipidemia Obesity Oral contraceptive use Heavy alcohol use Physical inactivity Sickle cell disease Smoking Procedure precautions • Age • 2/3 over 65 • Gender • M=F • Female>fatality • Race • AA > hispanics, NA • Asians > hem • Heredity • Family history • Previous TIA/CVA

  27. Presentation • Sudden onset • Focal neurological deficit • Progresses over minutes to hours • HA, N/V, <<LOC, HTN • Depends on location

  28. Stroke Symptoms include: • SUDDEN numbness or weakness of face, arm or leg • SUDDEN confusion, trouble speaking or understanding. • SUDDEN trouble with vison. • SUDDEN trouble walking, dizziness, loss of balance or coordination. • SUDDEN severe HA.

  29. Manifestationsby Vessel • Vertebral Artery • Pain in face, nose, or eye • Numbness and weakness of face (involved side) • Gait disturbances • Dysphagia • Dysarthria (motor speech)

  30. Manifestationsby Vessel • Internal carotid artery • Contralateral paralysis (arm, leg, face) • Contralateral sensory deficits • Aphasia (dominant hemisphere involvement) • Apraxia (motor task), • Agnosia (obj. recognition), • Unilateral neglect (non-dominant hemisphere involvement) • Homonymous hemianopia

  31. Manifestations & Complications by Body System • Neurological • Hyperthermia • Neglect syndrome • Seizures • Agnosias (familiar obj) • Communication deficits • Aphasia (expressive, receptive, global) • Agraphia • Visual deficits • Homonymous hemianopia • Diplopia • Decreased acuity • Decreased blink reflex

  32. Manifestations & Complications by Body System • Neurological (cont.) • Cognitive changes • Memory loss • Short attention span • Poor judgment • Disorientation • Poor problem-solving ability • Behavioral changes • Emotional lability • Loss of inhibitions • Fear • Hostility

  33. Manifestations & Complications by Body System • Musculoskeletal • Hemiplegia or hemiparesis • Contractures • Bony ankylosis • Disuse atrophy • Dysarthria - word formation • Dysphagia – swallow • Apraxia – complex movements • Flaccidity/spasticity • GU • Incontinence • Frequency • Urgency • Urinary retention • Renal calculi

  34. Manifestations & Complications by Body System • Integument • Pressure ulcers • Respiratory • Respiratory center damage • Airway obstruction • Decreased cough ability • GI • Dysphagia • Constipation • Stool impaction

  35. Initial Stroke Assessment/Interventions • Neurological assessment & NIH assessment • Call “Stroke Alert” Code • Ensure patient airway • VS • IV access • Maintain BP within parameters • Position head midline • HOB 30 (if no shock/injury) • CT, blood work, data collection/NIH Stroke Scale • Anticipate thrombolytic therapy for ischemic stroke

  36. Diagnostics Tests for the Emergent Evaluation of the Patient with Acute Ischemic Stroke • CT head (-) • Electrocardiogram • Chest x-ray • Hematologic studies (complete blood count, platelet count, prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time) • Serum electrolytes • Blood glucose • Renal and hepatic chemical analyses • National Institute of Health Scale (NIHSS) score

  37. Diagnostics Ischemic Stroke Hemorrhagic Stoke

  38. NIH Stroke Scale Score • Standardized method • measures degree of stroke r/t impairment and change in a patient over time. • Helps determine if degree of disability merits treatment with tPA. • As of 2008 stroke patients scoring greater than 4 points can be treated with tPA. • Standardized research tool to compare efficacy stroke treatments and rehabilitation interventions. • Measures several aspects of brain function, including consciousness, vision, sensation, movement, speech, and language not measured by Glasgow coma scale. • Current NIH Stroke Score guidelines for measuring stroke severity: Points are given for each impairment. • 0= no stroke • 1-4= minor stroke • 5-15= moderate stroke • 15-20= moderate/severe stroke • 21-42= severe stroke • A maximal score of 42 represents the most severe and devastating stroke.

  39. Nursing Management • Assessment • Monitoring • BP • TCDs • CBC • Preventing complications • Bowel program • DVT prophylaxis • Siezure prophylaxis • Psychological support • Discharge planning

  40. Treatment • Endovascular • Neurosurgery • Radiosurgery

  41. Medical Management • BP • MAP • CPP • Factor VII, Vit K, FFP • ICP • HOB • Sedation • Osmotherapy • Hyperventilation • Paralytics • Fluid management • euvolemia • Seizure prophylaxis • Keppra • Dilantin • Sedation • Body temperature • PT/OT/ST • DVT prophylaxis

  42. Treatment Ischemic Hemorrhagic Medical management Decompression Craniotomy Craniectomy • Medical management • TpA • Endovascular • Carotid endarectomy • Merci clot removal • http://youtu.be/P2TNz-TniIA PT/OT/ST REHABILITATION

  43. Medications • Anti-coagulants – A fib & TIA • Antithrombotics • Calcium channel blockers – Nimotop (nimodipine) • Corticosteroids ??? • Diuretics – Mannitol, Lasix (Furosemide) • Anticonvulsants – Dilantin (phenytoin) or Cerebyx (Fosphenytoin Sodium Injection) • Thrombolytics - tPA (recombinant tissue plasminogen activator)

  44. Medications • Thrombolytics Recombinant Alteplase (rtPA) Activase, Tissue plasminogen activator • Treatment must be initiated promptly after CT to R/O bleed • Systemic within 3 hours of onset of symptoms • Intra-arterial within 6 hours of symptoms • Some exclusions: • Seizure at onset • Subarachnoid hemorrhage • Trauma within 3 months • History of prior intracranial hemorrhage • AV malformation or aneurysm • Surgery 14 days, pregnancy, • Cardiac cath. 7 days

  45. Neurosurgical Management • Craniotomy • Craniectomy • EVD placement • ICP monitor placement

  46. Recommendations for Surgical Treatment of ICH • Nonsurgical candidates • Small hemorrhage • Minimal deficit • GCS </= 4 (unless brain stem compression) • Loss of brainstem fxn • Severe coagulopathy • Basal ganglion or thalamic • Surgical candidates • >3cm • Neuro deficit • Brain stem compression • MLS, HCP • Aneurysm, AVM, cavernous hemangioma • Young c mod/large lobar hemorrhage c clinical deterioration

More Related