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Summary Stroke Key Points

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November 8, 2024
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Chapter 62

Stroke

KEY POINTS

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY OF STROKE

• The brain needs a continuous supply of blood to provide the oxygen and glucose that

neurons need to function. A stroke occurs when there is an interruption, either from

ischemia to a part of the brain or hemorrhage into the brain, in the blood supply that

results in the death of brain cells.

• Two major pairs of arteries supply blood to the brain: internal carotid arteries (anterior

circulation) and vertebral arteries (posterior circulation). Factors that affect blood flow to

the brain include systemic BP, cardiac output, and blood viscosity.

• Atherosclerosis, a hardening and thickening of arteries, is the major cause of ischemic

stroke. It can lead to thrombus formation and contribute to emboli.


RISK FACTORS FOR STROKE

• The most effective way to decrease the burden of stroke is prevention. Nonmodifiable

risk factors include age, gender, race, and heredity.

• Hypertension is the single most important modifiable risk factor. Other risk factors

include increased serum cholesterol, smoking, excess alcohol consumption, obesity,

physical inactivity, poor diet, cardiac abnormalities, and drug use.




1
Copyright © 2023 by Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

, TYPES OF STROKE

Ischemic Stroke

• A transient ischemic attack (TIA) is a transient episode of neurologic dysfunction caused

by focal brain, spinal cord, or retinal ischemia, but without acute infarction of the brain.

Symptoms typically last less than 1 hour. Although most TIAs resolve, one third will

progress to an ischemic stroke.

• An ischemic stroke results from inadequate blood flow to the brain from partial or

complete occlusion of an artery. They are divided into thrombotic and embolic strokes.

• A thrombotic stroke occurs from injury to a blood vessel wall and formation of a blood

clot. The lumen of the blood vessel becomes narrowed, and if it becomes occluded,

infarction occurs.

• The extent of a thrombotic stroke depends on rapidity of onset, size of the lesion, and

presence of collateral circulation.

• Embolic stroke occurs when an embolus lodges in and occludes a cerebral artery,

resulting in infarction and edema of the area supplied by the involved vessel. The patient

often has a rapid occurrence of severe symptoms. Prognosis is related to the amount of

brain tissue deprived of its blood supply.


Hemorrhagic Stroke

• Hemorrhagic strokes result from bleeding into the brain tissue itself or into the

subarachnoid space or ventricles.




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