Top Banner
Assessment and diagnosis in stroke Nick Ward DEPARTMENT OF HEADACHE, BRAIN INJURY, AND NEUROREHABILITATION NATIONAL HOSPITAL FOR NEUROLOGY AND NEUROSURGERY INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGY UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON
34
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Nick WardDEPARTMENT OF HEADACHE, BRAIN INJURY, AND NEUROREHABILITATION

NATIONAL HOSPITAL FOR NEUROLOGY AND NEUROSURGERY

INSTITUTE OF NEUROLOGYUNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON

Page 2: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Objectives

• You should know1. The essential clinical features to be elicited2. The essential investigations to be performed3. Understand some of the differential diagnosis4. Understand the basic subtypes of stroke

Pathology – what?Anatomy – where?Mechanism – why?

• You should be able to diagnose and assess a patient with suspected stroke

Page 3: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

•65 year old man

•Found collapsed at home by wife

•Not moving right side very well

•Not speaking

•nicotine stained fingers

•bp 190/110

Positively diagnose stroke

CT normal

Page 4: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

IMMEDIATE CLINICAL APPROACHABC

Check blood sugar

Glasgow Coma Scale <12 consider nasal airway

<8 consider intubation

Pyrexia, neck stiffness

Oxygen

IV access

RAPID neurological assessment motor

speech

visual

sensory

Page 5: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Clinical syndrome

• Syndrome of focal neurological symptoms

and signs

• Sudden onset

• Symptoms maximal within minutes to hours

• Predominantly negative symptoms

MAKE A POSITIVE DIAGNOSIS!

Page 6: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

History

• Onset – spread of symptoms?

• Focal symptoms – language/ motor/ sensory/ visual

• Trauma, previous history, systemically unwell

• Risk factors

• Normal functional level

Page 7: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Examination

• Neurologic

– “standard” cranium and limbs

– status – degree of consciousness – GCS

– swallow

Page 8: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

• General

– Cardiovascular

• Pulse / BP / Murmurs / Bruits

– Chest

• Pneumonia

Examination

Page 9: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Conditions that mimic acute stroke

411 patients initially diagnosed as having stroke

78 (19%) of these eventually diagnosed as some other condition

333 patients confirmed to have had stroke

Seizure (17%)

Systemic infection (17%)

Brain tumour (15%)

Toxic-metabolic (13%)

Page 10: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Multidisciplinaryassessment

• Nursing• Functional disability• Communication• Swallowing function• Movement disability• Nutritional risk

Page 11: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Objectives revisited

• You should know1. The essential clinical features to be elicited2. The essential investigations to be performed3. Understand some of the differential diagnosis4. Understand the basic subtypes of stroke

Pathology – what?Anatomy – where?Mechanism – why?

• You should be able to diagnose and assess a patient with suspected stroke

Page 12: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Diagnosis – PathologyWhat?

• 80% ischaemic vs 20% haemorrhagic

• No reliable clinical method– Haemorrhage:

• ? ↓ GCS• signs of ↑ ICP• headache?• on warfarin?

• Neuroimaging - only way to be sure

Page 13: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Infarction Haemorrhage

infarction or haemorrhage ?Answer……………….do scan

Page 14: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Diagnosis – AnatomyWhere?

Page 15: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Brain cross section showing the arteries after injection of contrast

Page 16: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Anatomy –Where?

Page 17: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Arterial territories and clinical presentations

• Anterior circulation – carotid + branches– Ophthalmic - amaurosis fugax

– MCA - Hemiparesis,hemisensory loss cortical signs

– ACA – Hemiparesis (Leg > Arm), no/mild sensory deficit, frontal lobe signs

• Posterior circulation – vertebrobasilar – PICA/AICA/PCA – Cranial nerve and long tract signs,

N+V, diplopia, Vertigo, ataxia, coma

Page 18: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Diagnosis – MechanismWhy?

• TOAST classification:– Lacunar (penetrating vessel occlusion)– Large vessel occlusion – Cardioembolic– Other (eg sickle cell disease)– Undetermined

• Haemorrhage

Page 19: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

EMBOLIC SOURCES

Platelet clots

Fibrin clots

Page 20: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

1: Penetrating vessel disease

Lacunar stroke

1. Pure hemiparesis2. Hemisensory loss3. Ataxic Hemiparesis4. Clumsy hand –

dysarthria syndrome

Absence of cortical features

Page 21: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke
Page 22: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

2: Large vessel - MCA

HemiparesisHemisensory lossVisual field defectCortical signs

– Dysphasia– Neglect

MCA stroke

Page 23: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke
Page 24: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

3: Large vessel - PCA

Nausea + VomitingDiplopiaVertigoAtaxia‘Crossed’ signsVisual field defectComa

Page 25: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke
Page 26: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

4. HaemorrhageConforms to this schema

Page 27: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Infarction Haemorrhage

Page 28: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Who to scan urgently

• Those with a depressed level of consciousness in whom neurosurgical intervention would be considered

• Patients on anticoagulants

• Patients who may be suitable for thrombolysis

Page 29: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Neuroimaging:CT or MRI?

CT • Readily available• Cheap• Better for blood• Can be used acutely• May be only choice eg

pacemaker• New techniques

MRI• Less availability• Expensive• Better anatomy• Better for posterior

fossa• Can be used acutely

(DWI)

Whichever is available urgently!

Page 30: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Other investigations

• FBC• U+E• Sugar• Cholesterol• ECG / Echo• CXR• Neuroimaging• Vascular imaging

Page 31: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Investigations

• Help to answer questions– Where? What? Why?

• e.g. which side/arterial territory?infarction or haemorrhage ?lacunar or large vessel?

Page 32: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Summary• Stroke is a clinical syndrome NOT a diagnosis

– Need then to answer• What is it?• Where is it?• Why did it happen?

• Urgent assessment should establish– Deficit – Risk factors + likely cause– Complications– Multidisciplinary team

Page 33: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

HistoryStroke clerking proforma

Identify risk factors

Pre-stroke function

ExaminationNeurological assessment

Identify risk factors

MultidisciplinaryNursing

Functional disability

Communication

Swallowing function

Movement disability

Nutritional risk

Clinical InvestigationsHaemotology/biochemistry

Urinalysis

ECG

CXR

Investigations to considerCT scan

Carotid doppler

Echocardiography

MRI

ISCHAEMIC STROKE HAEMORRHAGIC STROKE

MANAGEMENT

ASSESSMENT OF STROKE PATIENTS: SUMMARY

Page 34: Assessment and diagnosis in stroke

Objectives Revisited

• You should know1. The essential clinical features to be elicited2. The essential investigations to be performed3. Understand some of the differential diagnosis4. Understand the basic subtypes of stroke

Pathology – what?Anatomy – where?Mechanism – why?

• You should be able to diagnose and assess a patient with suspected stroke