Stroke, Acute (Cerebrovascular Accident [CVA])
BASICS
- Definition: Sudden onset of focal neurologic deficit due to ischemia/infarction or hemorrhage in the brain.
- Types:
- Ischemic (thrombotic/embolic) β 87%
- Hemorrhagic (intracerebral or subarachnoid) β 13%
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence: ~795,000 strokes annually (U.S.)
- Prevalence: 550/100,000
- Age: Risk increases >45 yrs; highest in 7th/8th decades.
- Sex: Males > females at younger ages; higher in women β₯75 yrs.
ETIOLOGY & PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Ischemic stroke: Thrombosis, embolism, systemic hypoperfusion.
- Hemorrhagic stroke: Most often due to hypertension.
- Genetics: Polygenic, multifactorial.
RISK FACTORS
- Uncontrollable: Age, gender, race, family history, prior stroke/TIA.
- Modifiable:
- Metabolic: diabetes, dyslipidemia
- Lifestyle: smoking, alcohol, drugs, inactivity
- Cardiovascular: HTN, atrial fibrillation, valvular heart disease, endocarditis, recent MI, carotid stenosis, hypercoagulable states, PFO
GENERAL PREVENTION
- Smoking cessation, regular exercise, weight control (BMI <30)
- Control BP, glucose, lipids
- Antiplatelet therapy in high-risk patients
- Anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation
COMMONLY ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS
- Coronary artery disease (major cause of death in first 5 years post-stroke)
DIAGNOSIS
HISTORY
- Time of symptom onset is critical
- Symptoms: sudden arm/leg/face weakness, speech or swallowing difficulty, vertigo, vision changes, altered consciousness
- Vomiting and severe headache suggest hemorrhage
PHYSICAL EXAM
- ABCs: Airway, Breathing, Circulation
- Vitals: Pulse, BP
- Neuro Exam:
- Anterior cerebral artery: Leg > face/arm motor/sensory deficit, gait apraxia
- Middle cerebral artery:
- Dominant: aphasia, face/arm > leg weakness, hemianopia
- Non-dominant: neglect, hemianopia, similar weakness pattern
- Posterior cerebral artery: hemianopia, visual hallucinations, sensory/motor deficits
- Posterior circulation: diplopia, vertigo, ataxia, Horner syndrome, dysphagia
- Predictive findings: Facial paresis, arm weakness/drift, abnormal speech
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Complicated migraine, Todd paralysis, infection (meningitis, encephalitis), metabolic/toxic (hypoglycemia), tumor, trauma, other intracranial hemorrhage (epidural, subdural, SAH)
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS & INTERPRETATION
- Labs: Glucose, ECG, CBC, electrolytes, troponin, PT/PTT/INR
- Imaging: Emergent noncontrast head CT (within 20 min of ED arrival)
- Multimodal CT/MRI improves diagnosis
- MRI (DW) more sensitive for AIS/posterior lesions
- Before IV tPA: Only noncontrast CT and glucose required unless contraindications
- Echocardiogram: If suspect cardioembolic source
-
ECG monitoring: 30-day event monitor for cryptogenic stroke
-
Early CT findings of ischemia: Hyperdense MCA, loss of gray-white differentiation, sulcal effacement
TREATMENT
- BP management:
- Withhold antihypertensives unless SBP >220 or DBP >120 (goal: lower 15% in first 24 hr)
- If thrombolysis planned: BP <185/110 before tPA
- ICH: goal BP 160/90 or MAP 110
- Thrombolysis:
- IV tPA (alteplase) within 3 hours (up to 4.5 hr in select patients)
- Dose: 0.9 mg/kg (max 90 mg), 10% bolus, rest over 60 min
- Door-to-needle time <60 min
- Monitor neuro status and BP closely
- Discontinue if severe HA, angioedema, HTN, N/V develop
-
Obtain follow-up CT/MRI at 24 hr before antiplatelet/anticoagulation
-
Antiplatelet: Aspirin 160β300 mg/day within 24β48 hr after AIS
-
BP control options: Labetalol, nicardipine
-
Carotid endarterectomy: >70% ipsilateral stenosis, or 50β69% in selected patients
- Endovascular thrombectomy: Effective up to 16β24 hours for eligible patients with large vessel occlusion
ISSUES FOR REFERRAL
- Neurology follow-up 1 week after discharge
ADDITIONAL THERAPIES
- DVT prophylaxis
- Early PT/OT/speech therapy
- Statin continuation
- Deep brain stimulation and fluoxetine for motor recovery (if indicated)
- Acupuncture may help neurologic function (limited evidence)
SURGERY/OTHER PROCEDURES
- Ventricular drain for hydrocephalus
- Decompressive surgery for major cerebellar infarction
ADMISSION, INPATIENT, NURSING CARE
- Frequent neuro exams for 24 hr (monitor for cerebral edema)
- Head elevation if ICP β; horizontal bed for ischemic stroke acute phase
- Monitor cardiac rhythm 24 hr minimum
- NPO until swallow evaluation; maintain O2 >94%, normal saline IV hydration
- Treat hypo/hyperglycemia (target glucose 140β180 mg/dL)
- Correct anticoagulant-induced ICH with vitamin K/FFP/PCC
ONGOING CARE
- Aggressive risk factor management for secondary prevention (aspirin, clopidogrel, Aggrenox)
- PT/OT/SLP as needed
- Fall precautions, nutrition, and skin care
PATIENT EDUCATION
- Refer to American Stroke Association: stroke.org
PROGNOSIS
- Highly variable; NIHSS predicts prognosis
COMPLICATIONS
- Acute: Brain herniation, hemorrhagic transformation, MI, CHF, dysphagia, aspiration, UTI, DVT, PE, malnutrition, pressure sores
- Chronic: Falls, depression, dementia, contractures, OSA
ICD-10
- I63.9: Cerebral infarction, unspecified
- I61.9: Nontraumatic intracerebral hemorrhage, unspecified
- I63.50: Cereb infarction due to unspecified occlusion/stenosis of unspecified cerebral artery
CLINICAL PEARLS
- Unless hemorrhagic or thrombolysis, do not lower BP acutely.
- IV tPA indicated within 4.5 hours for most ischemic strokes; earlier = better.
- Noncontrast head CT is essential prior to thrombolysis.
- Early recognition and treatment are critical to outcome.