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Stroke

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Title: Stroke


1
Stroke
  • Core Rounds
  • Mark Y. Wahba
  • Preceptor Dr. Ian Rigby
  • Oct. 16th, 2003

2
WHO definition Stroke
  • a neurological deficit of sudden onset
    accompanied by focal dysfunction and symptoms
    lasting more than 24 hours that are presumed to
    be of a non-traumatic vascular origin

3
WHO definition Transient Ischemic Attack
  • neurological events that have a duration shorter
    than 24 hours, followed by complete return to
    baseline

4
Outline
  • Introduction
  • clinical features, pathophysiology, types of
    stroke, differential diagnosis
  • Vascular Anatomy
  • Stroke Patterns
  • TIA
  • Management in the ED
  • Thrombolysis good or bad?

5
Facts
  • Leading cause of adult disability
  • 3rd leading cause of death in US
  • 75 of all strokes occur in pts gt65yrs of age
  • In the US annual medical costs of stroke care is
    30 billion
  • 20 of expenditures occur in the first 90 days
    after an event
  • The National Stroke Association.  The brain at
    risk Understanding and preventing stroke.  1998

6
Emergency Care Facts
  • 2 of all 911 calls
  • 4 of all hospital admissions from the ED involve
    patients with potential strokes

7
Prognosis
  • Many pts present to ED with a devastating
    neurological picture
  • Substantial improvement may occur over time, even
    in the absence of specific therapy
  • 20 of patients who survive the initial event
    eventually have full or partial resolution of
    hemiparesis

8
  • Risk of repeated stroke is highest within the
    first 30 days
  • 25-40 of patients will have a repeat stroke
    within 5 yrs
  • EMR Sept 29,1997. Stroke Comprehensive
    Guidelines for Clinical Assessment and Emergency
    Management (Part 1)

9
Risk Factors
  • Hypertension-primary risk factor
  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Increasing age (particularly gt 65)
  • Cigarette smoking
  • Diabetes
  • Black population
  • Hx of TIA
  • Male Female 32

10
Stroke in the young Pt
  • 3-4 of strokes occur in people aged 15-45
  • Sickle Cell anemia
  • Hypercoaguable states
  • Pregnancy, OCP use, antiphospholipid antibodies,
    protein C and S deficiencies
  • Drugs
  • Cocaine, phenylpropanolamine, amphetamines

11
Pathophysiology
  • Cerebral blood flow provides brain with oxygen
    and glucose for energy at rate of 40-60ml/100g of
    brain/min
  • When rate is lt10ml/100g of brain/min cell
    membrane failure occurs
  • ? extracellular K, ? intracellular Ca
  • ? ATP, profound cellular acidosis
  • Cell death
  • Electrical silence

12
Pathophysiology Ischemic penumbra
  • the area surrounding the primary injury
  • CBF is 10-18ml/100g of brain/min
  • Electrical silence but irreversible damage has
    not yet occurred
  • Animal studies
  • reversible neurologic deficit if cerebral vessel
    occlusion lasts less than 2h
  • after 6h of occlusion irreversible neurologic
    deficit
  • Thus the 2-6 hour therapeutic window for
    thrombolysis

13
What are the types of stroke?
  • Ischemic
  • Hemorrhagic

14
Ischemic Stroke
  • 85 of strokes
  • Thrombotic or Embolic
  • One month mortality 15

15
Ischemic Thromboticlocal origin of clot
  • Usually develops at night during sleep
  • Symptoms perceived in morning
  • Suspect in hx of atherosclerosis, hypercoaguable
    states, and collagen vascular disorders

16
Ischemic Embolicproximal origin of clot
  • Occurs at any time
  • Frequently during periods of vigorous activity
  • Hx of Atrial fibrillation, valvular vegetations,
    thromboembolism from MI, ulcerated plaques in
    carotid system
  • Seizures in 20 of cases

17
Hemorrhagic Stroke
18
Hemorrhagic Stroke
  • 15 of strokes
  • intracerebral hemorrhage gt subarachnoid
    hemorrhage
  • Occur during stress or exertion
  • Focal deficits rapidly evolve
  • Confusion, coma or immediate death

19
Hemorrhagic
  • One month mortality
  • 50 for SAH
  • 80 for intracerebral hemorrhage

20
Vascular Anatomy
21
Cerebral Blood Supply
  • Anterior Circulation
  • From carotid system
  • Supplies 80 of brain
  • Posterior Circulation
  • From vertebral system
  • Supplies 20 of brain

22
Internal carotid territory
23
Internal Carotid Artery
  • Anterior portion of the brain involving the
    frontal, temporal, and parietal lobes, is
    supplied by the carotid arteries (CA)
  • CA arises from the innominate artery on the right
    and aortic arch on the left. At level of upper
    neck CA branches into internal and external
  • the internal carotid artery terminates into the
    middle (MCA) and anterior (ACA) cerebral arteries
  • MCA perfuses the cortex, parietal lobe, temporal
    lobe, internal capsule, and portions of the basal
    ganglia
  • ACA forms the anterior portion of the circle of
    Willis and supplies portions of the frontal lobe

24
Carotid Artery
  • Approximately half of patients with moderate
    stenosis (greater than 50 occlusion) will have a
    carotid bruit
  • about 90 of patients with a carotid bruit have
    at least moderate stenosis
  • Wiebers D, Whisnant J, Sanok B, et al.
    Prospective comparison of a cohort with
    asymptomatic carotid bruit and a population-based
    cohort without carotid bruit. Stroke
    199021984-988.
  • Ingall T, Homer D, Whisnant J, et al. Predictive
    value of carotid bruit for carotid
    atherosclerosis. Arch Neurol. 198946418-422

25
Vertebrobasilar System
  • Perfuses the posterior part of the brain
    including the occipital lobe, cerebellum, and
    brainstem
  • vertebral arteries arise from the subclavian
    arteries
  • give off branches supplying the medulla and
    portions of the cerebellum
  • basilar artery is formed by the junction of the
    two vertebral arteries and gives off a variety of
    penetrating arteries supplying the brainstem and
    portions of the basal ganglia before dividing
    into the posterior cerebral arteries

26
Vertebrobasilar System
Posterior cerebral arteries
Basilar artery
Vertebral arteries
27
Stroke Patterns
28
Dominant Hemisphere
  • Majority of right handed and most left handed
    patients have dominance for speech and language
    located in the left hemisphere
  • Left hemisphere infarction is characterized by
    aphasia (both motor Brocas and sensory
    Wernickes) and apraxia

29
Nondominant Hemisphere
  • Less predictable syndromes
  • Attention defects extinction and neglect
  • Behavioral changes acute confusion and delirium

30
Aphasia Important?
  • Yes usually localizes a lesion to the dominant
    cerebral cortex in the middle cerebral artery
    distribution
  • Rosens Emergency Medicine 5th edition
  • Aphasia and dysphasia are used interchangeably
  • Dont confuse with Dysphagia

31
Case
  • 80 yr old male
  • Sudden onset right side hemiplegia,
    hemianesthesia
  • eyes deviated to left
  • babbling

32
MCA territory(image is of vascular territory,
not specifically of previous case)
33
Middle Cerebral Artery
34
Middle Cerebral Artery
  • Embolism from ICA or heart to MCA is most common
    cause of cerebral infarction
  • Supplies most of the convex surface of brain
  • Deep tissue basal ganglia, putamen, and parts
    of globus pallidus, caudate nucleus, and internal
    capsule

35
MCA stroke
  • Contralateral hemiplegia and hemianesthesia arm
    and face gt leg
  • Deviation of the head and eyes toward side of
    infarct Gaze preference
  • Global aphasia (in dominant hemisphere)
  • Hemianopia, Hemineglect

36
Case
  • 80 yr old female
  • Awoke with weakness in right leg
  • Slight right side weakness leggtarm
  • Family states she has impaired judgment and
    insight
  • seems like a baby sucking and grasping

37
Anterior Cerebral Artery
38
Anterior Cerebral Artery
  • Supplies basal and medial aspects of the cerebral
    hemispheres
  • Extends to anterior two thirds of parietal lobe
  • Perforating branches supply anterior caudate
    nucleus, parts of internal capsule, putamen and
    anterior hypothalamus

39
Anterior Cerebral Artery Infarction
  • weakness of the leg
  • /- proximal muscle weakness in the upper
    extremities
  • Affect frontal lobe impaired judgment and
    insight, change in affect
  • Presence of primitive grasp and suck reflexes
  • Language impairment (common finding)

40
Case
  • 77 yr old male
  • Sudden onset of dizziness, double vision
  • On exam has pain and temp deficit on half of face
    and on opposite side of body

41
Posterior Circulation
42
Posterior Circulation/ Vertebrobasilar System
  • 2 Vertebral arteries ? basilar artery
    ?posterior cerebral arteries
  • Supplies brainstem, cerebellum, thalamus,
    auditory and vestibular centers of the ear,
    visual occipital cortex

43
Vertebrobasilar System
  • Heterogeneous syndromes and presentations
  • Cranial nerve deficits and involvement of
    cerebellum and neurosensory tracts
  • diplopia, dysphagia, dysarthria, dizziness,
    vertigo, ataxia
  • pain and temp deficits in face occur on opposite
    side of body

44
Vertebrobasilar System
  • Thalamic lesions sensory symptoms involving loss
    of tactile, temp, and pain sensation, numbness
    on side of body opposite face
  • Occipital lesions homonymous visual field defect
    (hemianopia or quadrantanopia)

45
Case
  • 85 yr old black male
  • Diabetic, hypertension
  • Sudden onset of being unable to move left side of
    body
  • Able to talk
  • Sensation intact

46
Lacunar Infarction
  • Lesion of small penetrating branch arteries into
    BG, thalamus, pons, internal capsule
  • Pure strokes
  • Motor, sensory, ataxic hemiparesis
  • Usually result in hemiparesis of face, arm and
    leg
  • Lack of impairment of consciousness, aphasia, or
    visual disturbances
  • More common in blacks and hx of HTN, DM
  • 60 of patients with lacunar infarctions will be
    independent at one year following stroke

47
Case
  • 85 yr old female
  • In ICU, post AAA rupture repair
  • GCS 15/15
  • Complaining of difficulty moving her leg and that
    it feels numb

48
Watershed Infarction
  • occurs in vulnerable areas supplied by distal
    distribution cerebral arteries during periods of
    hypotension
  • infarction between the anterior and middle
    cerebral arteries presents with hemiparesis and
    hemianesthesia, predominantly in the leg
  • dominant hemisphere infarctions decrease in
    verbal ability with preserved comprehension
  • Infarction involving the posterior watershed area
    presents with homonymous hemianopia /-
    hypoesthesia in the face and legs

49
Case
  • 77 yr old male
  • Sudden onset headache, vomiting
  • went unresponsive
  • GCS 3/15, elevated BP
  • What has happened?

50
Hemorrhagic Stroke
  • Classic sudden onset HA, vomiting, elevated BP
  • Focal neurologic deficits that progress over
    minutes
  • May present with agitation and lethargy but
    progresses to stupor or coma

51
Transient Ischemic Attack
52
Transient Ischemic Attack
  • Neurological deficit of sudden onset accompanied
    by focal dysfunction that has a duration of
    shorter than 24 hours
  • Most resolve within 15-30 minutes
  • Straightforward definition but complex and
    controversial management

53
Common causes of ischemic stroke and transient
ischemic attack
54
TIA
  • Harbinger of ischemic cerebral infarction
  • In the absence of treatment
  • 5-10 of pts will have a stroke within a month
    and 12 within a year
  • After 2 years a stroke will have occurred in
    20-40 of TIA patients
  • Tuhrim S, Reggia JA. Management of TIA. American
    Family Physician 19863151041
  • Morris PJ et al, Transient Ischemic Attacks New
    York Marce, Dekker, 1982

55
TIA management
  • Is the pt high risk?
  • Multiple TIA in last 2/52, severe deficit,
    crescendo symptoms, TIA caused by cardioembolic
    events
  • If so CT head, admit for workup
  • Same for first time TIA

56
TIA Management
  • If low risk D/C home after seeing stroke team
  • FASTER trial Fast Assessment of Stroke and TIA
    to prevent Early Recurrence
  • lt12 hours of onset of TIA or minor stroke
  • randomized to Anti-platelet therapy with ASA or
    ASA clopidogrel (Plavix)
  • randomized to Statin therapy with simvastatin
    vs. placebo
  • Outcome stroke at 90 days, combined outcome of
    MI, stroke, or vascular death at 90 days, stroke
    severity

57
What if they are already on ASA?
  • In Calgary start patient on Clopidogrel (Plavix)
    as well

58
Do we thrombolyse or is this just a TIA?
  • 312 pts randomized to placebo group in the NINDS
    trial
  • Medial time to treatment was 90 minutes
  • Only 2 were symptom free at 24 hours
  • unlikely that patients with a persistent
    neurologic deficit of longer than 90 minutes will
    resolve spontaneously
  • Borg KT et al TIA an emergency medicine
    approach. Emergency Medicine Clinics of North
    America. Vol 20, 3, Aug 2002

59
Management of Patients with Ischemic Stroke
  • Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients
    With Ischemic Stroke. A Scientific Statement
    From the Stroke Council of the American Stroke
    Association. Adams HP et al Stroke. 200334
    1056-1083.

60
Hx and Physical
  • in general, the diagnosis of stroke is
    straightforward
  • Emergency physicians correctly identified 152 or
    176 consecutive stroke patients (sens 86.4) and
    1818 of 1835 patients without stroke (spec 99.1)
  • Von Arbin M et al. Accuracy of bedside diagnosis
    in stroke. Stroke. 1981 12288-293

61
But
  • Errors in clinical diagnosis can occur
  • One series of 821 patients diagnosed with stroke
    13 were later determined to have other
    conditions
  • Norris JW. Misdiagnosis of stroke. Lancet.
    19821328-331
  • Unrecognized seizures, confused states, syncope,
    brain tumors subdural hematoma hypoglycemia and
    other toxic or metabolic disorders

62
Differential Diagnosis
  • Complex migraine headache with hemiparesis
  • Post-ictal paresis (Todds paresis)
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Cerebral tumor
  • Cerebral infection
  • Subdural hematoma
  • Drug intoxication
  • Malignant hypertension

63
History
  • Time of onset is critical
  • For treatment the onset is assumed to be last
    time pt was symptom free
  • Recent medical or neurological events Trauma,
    hemorrhage, surgery, MI, previous stroke
  • Meds oral anticoagulants, antiplatelets

64
Neurologic Examination
  • The examination recommended by the National
    Institutes of Health is broken down into 6 areas
  • Level of consciousness
  • Visual assessment
  • Motor function
  • Cerebellar function
  • Sensation and neglect
  • Cranial nerves

65
Imaging and Lab - All patients should have
  • Brain CT
  • ECG
  • Serum Glucose
  • Electrolytes
  • Creatinine
  • CBC
  • PT/INR
  • aPTT

66
Selected Patients
  • LFTs
  • Tox screen and EtOH (if uncertain about hx)
  • Preg test
  • ABG (if hypoxic)
  • CXR (if lung pathology suspected)
  • LP (if suspecting SAH and CT is negative)
  • EEG (suspecting seizures )

67
Imaging
  • MRI vs CT

68
MRI
  • Standard MRI (T1, T2 weighted) is relatively
    insensitive to changes of acute ischemia within
    first few hours of stroke
  • Show abnormalities in lt50 of patients (class A)
  • But, diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) visualizes
    ischemic regions within minutes of symptoms
  • Warach S et al. Fast MRI diffusion-weighted
    imaging of acute human stroke. Neurology.
    199242 1717-1723

69
Limitations of MRI
  • Difficulty in identifying ICH
  • Cost, limited availability, patient CI
    (claustrophobia, pacemakers, metal implants)
  • Additional research is needed to determine the
    utility of MRI in place of CT for identifying
    hemorrhage among patients with suspected stroke
  • Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients
    With Ischemic Stroke. A Scientific Statement
    From the Stroke Council of the American Stroke
    Association. Adams HP et al Stroke. 200334
    1056-1083.

70
CT
  • CT is the gold standard to which other brain
    imaging studies are compared
  • CT accurately identifies most cases of ICH and
    helps discriminate nonvascular causes of
    neurological symptoms (brain tumor)-grade B
  • Jacobs et al. Autopsy correlations of
    computerized tomography experience with 6000 CT
    scans. Neurology. 1976 261111-1118

71
With r-tPA, interest in CT in
  • Subtle early signs of infarction might affect
    treatment decisions
  • hyperdense middle cerebral artery sign and loss
    of gray-white differentiation in the cortical
    ribbon are associated with poor outcome (class A
    evidence)
  • Presence of widespread signs of early infarction
    as this correlates with a high risk of
    hemorrhagic transformation (level 1)
  • But MDs ability to reliably and reproducibly
    recognize early CT changes is variable (class B)
  • Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients
    With Ischemic Stroke. A Scientific Statement
    From the Stroke Council of the American Stroke
    Association. Adams HP et al Stroke. 200334
    1056-1083

72
Other CT scan techniques
  • Xenon enhanced CT provides a quantitative
    measurement of cerebral blood flow
  • Perfusion CT measures CBF by mapping the
    appearance of an IV contrast bolus
  • further studies are needed to determine their
    clinical utility

73
Currently ImagingGoal for patients who are
candidates for thrombolysis
  • Complete CT within 25 minutes of arrival to ED
  • Study interpreted within 20 min
  • Thus door to interpretation time of 45 min
  • Marler JR et al. Proceedings of a national
    symposium on rapid identification and treatment
    of acute stroke 1997. (GENERIC) Pamphlet.

74
Other management issues
75
ECG?
  • Acute MI can lead to stroke and acute stroke can
    lead to MI
  • Arrhythmias can occur in pts with ischemic stroke
  • Atrial fibrillation detected in the acute setting
  • Oppenheimer sm et at. The cardiac consequences of
    stroke. Neurol Clin. 199210167-176
  • Dimant J et al. ECG changes and myocardial damage
    in patients with acute CVA. Stroke. 19778 448-455

76
Cardiac Rhythm
  • Pts with Right hemisphere infarcts have high risk
    of arrhythmias
  • Thought to be due to disturbances in sympathetic
    and parasymp nervous system function (level V)
  • ECG changes in stroke include ST seg dep, QT
    prolongation, inverted T waves, prominent U waves

77
Blood Tests?
  • Use of rtPA should not be delayed while waiting
    for INR or aPTT unless there is a clinical
    suspicion of a bleeding abnormality or unless the
    patient has been taking warfarin and heparin or
    their use is uncertain.
  • Determination of platelets and INR is required in
    pts taking warfarin prior to administration of
    thrombolytics
  • Adams et al. Guidelines for thrombolytic therapy
    for acute stroke. Circulation. 1996941167-1174

78
Hypoglycemia
  • Can cause focal neurological signs that mimic
    stroke
  • Can itself lead to brain injury
  • Therefore prompt measurement and rapid correction
    are indicated

79
Hyperglycemia
  • Uncertainty whether hyperglycemia worsens stroke
    outcomes
  • Weir CJ et al. Is hyperglycemia an independent
    predictor of poor outcome after acute stroke?
    BMJ.19973141303-1306.
  • No data evaluating the impact of maintaining
    euglycemia during the period of acute stroke
  • Reasonable goal is to lower markedly elevated
    glucose levels to lt16.63 mmol/L (grade C)
  • Overly aggressive fluid therapy should be avoided
    because it can result in fluid shifts that may be
    detrimental to the brain

80
Does everyone need a CXR?
  • Was previously recommended for all pts with acute
    ischemic stroke
  • A study found that clinical management was
    altered in only 3.8 of patients having routine
    CXR at time of admission for stroke
  • Sagar G et al. Is admission chest radiography of
    any clinical value in acute stroke patients? Clin
    Radiology. 199651499-502
  • test is of little use in absence of an
    appropriate clinical indication (grade B)

81
Oxygen?
  • Pts with acute stroke should be monitored with
    pulse ox with a target O2 sat of gt95 (level V)
  • An endotracheal tube should be placed if the
    airway is threatened (level V)
  • 50 of patients requiring endotracheal intubation
    will die within 30 days of stroke
  • Grotta J et al. Elective intubation for
    neurologic deterioration after stroke. Neurology.
    199545640-644

82
Fever?
  • Increased temp in setting of acute stroke has
    been associated with poor neurological outcome
  • Azzimondi G et al. Fever in acute stroke worsens
    prognosis a prospective study. Stroke. 199526
    2040-2043
  • Source of any fever following stroke should be
    ascertained and the fever should be treated with
    antipyretics
  • Studies investigating hypothermia for treatment
    of patients with stroke but efficacy has yet to
    be established

83
Hypertension
  • Optimal management has not been established
  • Brott T et al. Hypertension and its treatment in
    the NINDS rtPA stroke trial. Stroke.
    1998291504-1509
  • In the absence of organ dysfunction or
    thrombolytic therapy there is little scientific
    basis and no clinically proven benefit for
    lowering BP among patients with acute ischemic
    stroke
  • Powers WJ et al Acute hypertension after stroke
    the scientific basis for treatment decisions.
    Neurology. 199343461-467

84
Hypertension
  • Situations that may require treatment
  • Hypertensive encephalopathy
  • Aortic dissection
  • Acute renal failure
  • Acute pulmonary edema
  • Acute MI

85
Consensus on Hypertension
  • Antihypertensive agents should be withheld unless
    the diastolic BP is gt120 mmHg or unless the
    systolic BP is gt220mmHg
  • Aim for a 10 to 15 reduction of BP
  • Use parenteral agents that are easily titrated
    labetalol, sodium nitroprusside
  • level V evidence

86
Hypertension in candidate for thrombolytics
  • Systolic BP must be lt185 mmHg
  • Diastolic BP must be lt110 mmHg
  • Pretreatment Labetalol 10-20mg IV over 1-2min
  • During treatment monitor BP q 15min for 2h
  • Use labetalol, Na nitroprusside infusions

87
Anticoagulants?
  • Several studies with heparin, LMW heparins,
    heparinoid
  • Conclusion
  • parenterally administered anticoagulants are
    associated with an increased risk of serious
    bleeding complications (level I)
  • early administration of the rapidly acting
    anticoagulants does not lower the risk of early
    recurrent stroke, including among patients with
    cardioembolic stroke (level I)

88
Anticoagulants
  • Recommendations
  • Urgent routine anticoagulation with the goal of
    improving neurological outcomes or preventing
    early recurrent stroke is not recommended for
    the treatment of patients with acute ischemic
    stroke (grade A)
  • Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients
    With Ischemic Stroke. A Scientific Statement
    From the Stroke Council of the American Stroke
    Association. Adams HP et al Stroke. 200334
    1056-1083

89
Antiplatelets
  • 2 large trials with aspirin
  • Chinese Acute Stroke Trial
  • International Stroke Trial

90
Chinese Acute Stroke Trial (CAST)
  • Prospective, randomized, placebo controlled trial
    of gt21000 pts, where ASA 160mg/day or placebo was
    given within 48h of stroke onset
  • Aspirin reduced early mortality
  • 3.3 vs 3.9 p0.04
  • No effect on the proportion of patients who were
    dead or dependent at hospital discharge
  • 30.5 vs 31.6 p0.08
  • (CAST randomized placebo-controlled trial of
    early aspirin use in 20000 patients with acute
    ischemic stroke. Lancet 1997 349 1641-1649

91
International Stroke Trial (IST)
  • Prospective, randomized, open-label trial of ASA
    and unfractionated heparin in gt19000 pts
  • half received ASA and half were instructed to
    avoid ASA, then half of pts in each group
    received unfractionated heparin
  • Significant reduction in recurrent events but
    acute mortality was not reduced (level I)
  • Small significant (0.1 absolute) significant
    increase in the incidence of intracranial
    hemorrhage (level I)
  • IST a randomized trial of aspirin, subcutaneous
    heparin, both or neither among 19435 patients
    with acute ischemic stroke. Lancet
    19973491569-1581

92
Antiplatelets
  • Combined analysis revealed
  • ASA had a small but statistically significant
    reduction of 9 (/-3) fever deaths or nonfatal
    strokes per 1000 treated patients
  • Absolute RR of 0.9
  • NNT of 111
  • Anticoagulants and Antiplatelet Agents in Acute
    Ischemic Stroke. Report of the joint stroke
    guideline development committee of the American
    academy of neurology and American stroke
    association. Stroke 2002331934-1942.

93
Antiplatelets
  • Conclusion use of aspirin within 24-48h after
    stroke in attempts to reduce death and disability
    is reasonable (level I)
  • Recommendation Aspirin should be given within 24
    to 48 hours of stroke onset in most patients
    (grade A)
  • Not recommended within 24 hours of thrombolytic
    agents (grade A)
  • Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients
    With Ischemic Stroke. A Scientific Statement
    From the Stroke Council of the American Stroke
    Association. Adams HP et al Stroke. 200334
    1056-1083

94
Thrombolysis for Acute Ischemic Stroke
  • Are we doing the right thing?

95
EMR Oct 13, 1997. Stroke Comprehensive
Guidelines for Clinical Assessment and Emergency
Management (Part II)
96
Thrombolysis History
  • U. S. Food and Drug Administration approval of
    rtPA (recombinant tissue plasminogen activator)
    for the treatment of acute stroke in June of 1996
  • based on the National Institute of Neurological
    Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) rt-PA Stroke Study
  • less than 10 percent of stroke patients are
    eligible for thrombolytic therapy
  • EMR Oct 13, 1997. Stroke Comprehensive
    Guidelines for Clinical Assessment and Emergency
    Management (Part II)

97
To date
  • 6 grade-one multi-center RCTs of thrombolytics
    for acute stroke demonstrated lack of benefit or
    worse outcomes with treatment
  • 3 trials of streptokinase were halted prematurely
    because of an excess of poor outcomes or deaths
    (level I)
  • the NINDS trial is the only published RCT of
    intravenous thrombolytic therapy that has been
    positive in favor of thrombolysis
  • Position Statement on Thrombolytic Therapy for
    Acute Ischemic Stroke, The CAEP Committee on
    Thrombolytic Therapy for Acute Ischemic Stroke
    http//www.caep.ca/002.policies/002-01.guidelines/
    thrombolytic.htm

98
ECASS
  • compared rtPA (1.1 mg/kg) to placebo in patients
    with lt6 hours of symptoms
  • early intracranial hemorrhage, fatal cerebral
    edema and early mortality were more common in
    treated patients than in controls
  • surviving t-PA recipients were more likely to
    have minimal or no disability at 3 months
  • authors concluded while some patients benefit,
    the rate of negative outcomes was prohibitively
    high
  • Intravenous rtPA was not more effective than
    placebo in improving neurological outcomes at 3
    months after stroke (level I)
  • Hacke W, et al. Intravenous thrombolysis with
    recombinant tissue plasminogen activator for
    acute hemispheric stroke, the European
    cooperative acute stroke study (ECASS). JAMA
    19952741017-25

99
ECASS vs NINDS
  • ECASS higher dose, longer window of treatment
  • Post hoc analysis concluded that pts treated
    within 3 hours appeared to benefit from rtPA

100
ECASS-II
  • applied the same eligibility criteria and used
    the same 0.9 mg/kg rtPA dose, but enrolled
    patients within 6 hours of symptom onset
  • More than 1/3 of pts in each group made and
    excellent recovery and no significant benefit was
    noted from treatment
  • rtPA did not significantly increase the rate of
    favorable 90-day outcomes (40.3 vs. 36.6,
    p0.277), and was associated with a higher
    incidence of parenchymal hemorrhage (11.8 vs.
    3.1), symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage (8.8
    vs. 3.4), and early death due to intracranial
    hemorrhage (11 vs. 2 cases)

101
ECASS-II
  • no significant differences in 30- or 90-day
    mortality
  • subgroup analysis showed a trend towards improved
    neurological outcomes in patients with lt3 hours
    of symptoms, but the numbers were small and
    statistically insignificant
  • ECASS-II therefore failed to reproduce the
    positive results of NINDS
  • Hacke W, Kaste M, Fieschi C, von Kummer R,
    Davalos A, Meier D et al. Randomized double-blind
    placebo-controlled trial of thrombolytic therapy
    with intravenous alteplase in acute ischemic
    stroke (ECASS II). Lancet 19983521245-51

102
ECASS-II
  • Recruitment bias?
  • Avoided recruitment of pts with Multilobar
    infarctions
  • Thus severity of strokes was less than in other
    trials
  • Generally more favorable prognosis may have
    reduced the likelihood of detecting a therapeutic
    effect

103
PROACT II
  • administered intra-arterial pro-urokinase (vs.
    placebo) to patients with lt6 hours of symptoms
  • At 90 day follow-up, thrombolytic patients had a
    higher rate of favorable outcomes (40 vs. 25 p
    0.04), defined as a modified Rankin score of 2
    or less
  • ICH with early neurological deterioration was
    more common in prourokinase patients (10 vs. 2
    p 0.6), and 90-day mortalities were similar
    between groups (25 vs. 27)
  • suggests that intra-arterial prourokinase may
    confer some benefit, but at substantially
    increased risk of symptomatic intracranial
    hemorrhage
  • Furlan A, Higashida R, Wechsler L, Gent M, Rowley
    H, Kase C, et al. Intra-arterial prourokinase for
    acute ischemic stroke. The PROACT II study a
    randomized controlled trial. JAMA 19992822003-11

104
ATLANTIS
  • placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial
    addressing the efficacy and safety of rtPA
    administered 3 to 5 hours after stroke onset
  • found no beneficial treatment effect, but a
    significantly higher rate of asymptomatic (11.4
    vs. 4.7) and symptomatic (7.0 vs. 1.1)
    intracerebral hemorrhage with rtPA
  • Clark WM, Wissman S, Albers GW, Jhamandas JH,
    Madden KP, Hamilton S. Recombinant tissue-type
    plasminogen activator (Alteplase) for ischemic
    stroke 3 to 5 hours after symptom onset. (The
    alteplase thrombolysis for acute
    noninterventional therapy for ischemic stroke
    ATLANTIS study). JAMA 19992822019-26

105
NINDS
  • multicentre, randomized, placebo-controlled trial
  • 624 patients with ischemic stroke were treated
    with intravenous t-PA (0.9 mg/kg) within 3 hours
    of the onset of stroke symptoms.
  • Part 1 primary endpoint was neurological
    improvement at 24h (complete neuro recovery or
    improvement of 4 points or more on NIHSS)
  • Part 2 primary end point was global odds ratio
    for favorable outcome (defined as complete or
    nearly complete neurological recovery at 3 months
    after stroke)

106
NINDS
  • Part 1 t-PA recipients did not suddenly
    improve, and there were no significant outcome
    differences at 24 hours
  • Part 2 patients treated with t-PA were more
    likely to have a favorable neurological outcome
    at 90 days (odds ratio 1.7 95 CI, 1.2-2.6
    p0.008)
  • Compared to controls, t-PA recipients had a 12
    absolute (32 relative) increase in the
    proportion with minimal or no disability

107
But
  • The benefit was similar at 1 year after stroke
    (level 1)
  • t-PA was associated with a 10-fold increase in
    symptomatic intracerebral hemorrhage (6.4 vs.
    0.6) (level 1)
  • the overall intracerebral hemorrhage rate
    (symptomatic asymptomatic) was 10.1
  • Mortality rate in the two treatment groups was
    similar at 3 months (17 vs 20) and 1 year (24
    vs 28)
  • The National Institute of Neurological Disorders
    and Stroke rt-PA Stroke Study Group. Tissue
    plasminogen activator for acute ischemic stroke.
    N Engl J Med 19953331581

108
Number Needed to Treat
  • NNT 1/Absolute Risk Reduction
  • ARRCER-EER
    ARR (165-65)/165 - (168-80)/168 ARR
    0.08225
  • about 8 absolute risk reduction if treated with
    tPA
  • NNT1/0.08225 12.
  • This means you need to treat 12 patients to see
    an improvement in outcome at 90 days

109
Number Needed to Harm
  • NNH 1/ARR
  • Absolute RR 8/165 - 21/168
    ARR-0.0765
  • In other words you have 8 absolute increased
    risk for CNS bleed if given tPA
  • NNH 1/ARR which is 13
  • Thus for every 13 patients you treat you will get
    a CNS bleed
  • take the asymptomatic bleeds out of the
    calculation the NNH is now about 17
  • or treat 17 patients to get a symptomatic CNS
    bleed

110
So
  • You have to treat 12 patients to get a good
    outcome overall as per NINDS definition
  • That's not bad, except that for every 17 you
    treat you get a symptomatic/fatal CNS bleed.
  • Thus the cautious approach in EM to CNS lytics
    and the strict eligibility criteria

111
Cochrane Stroke Group Trials Register
  • Up to January 2003
  • Objective assess safety and efficacy of
    thrombolytic agents in patients with acute
    ischemic stroke
  • Selection criteria randomized trials of any
    thrombolytic agent compared with control in
    patients with definite ischemic stroke

112
  • 18 trials, 5727 patients
  • Urokinase, streptokinase, recombinant tissue
    plasminogen activator, recombinant pro-urokinase
  • 2 trials intra arterial administration
  • 16 trials intra venous administration
  • 50 of data from tPA
  • Little data over age 80

113
Thrombolytic therapy
  • administered up to six hours after ischemic
    stroke, significantly reduced the proportion of
    patients who were dead or dependent at the end of
    follow-up at three to six months (OR 0.84, 95 CI
    0.75 to 0.95)
  • a significant increase in the odds of death
    within the first ten days (OR 1.81, 95 CI 1.46
    to 2.24), the main cause of which was fatal
    intracranial hemorrhage (OR 4.34, 95 CI 3.14 to
    5.99)
  • Symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage was increased
    following thrombolysis (OR 3.37, 95 CI 2.68 to
    4.22)

114
Thrombolytic therapy
  • also increased the odds of death at the end of
    follow-up at three to six months (OR 1.33, 95 CI
    1.15 to 1.53)
  • For patients treated within three hours of
    stroke, thrombolytic therapy appeared more
    effective in reducing death or dependency (OR
    0.66, 95 CI 0.53 to 0.83) with no statistically
    significant adverse effect on death (OR 1.13, 95
    CI 0.86 to 1.48)

115
Cochrane conclusions
  • Overall, thrombolytic therapy appears to result
    in a significant net reduction in the proportion
    of patients dead or dependent in activities of
    daily living.
  • However, this appears to be net of an increase in
    deaths within the first seven to ten days,
    symptomatic intracranial hemorrhage, and deaths
    at follow-up at three to six months
  • The data from trials using rtPA suggest that it
    may be associated with less hazard and more
    benefit

116
Cochrane conclusions
  • The data are promising and may justify the use of
    thrombolytic therapy with intravenous recombinant
    tissue plasminogen activator in experienced
    centers in highly selected patients
  • However, the data do not support the widespread
    use of thrombolytic therapy in routine clinical
    practice at this time

117
Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians
  • Position Statement on Thrombolytic Therapy for
    Acute Ischemic Stroke

118
basically
  • Similar to Cochrane findings
  • The data show that t-PA therapy must be limited
    to carefully selected patients within established
    protocols.
  • Until it is clear that the benefits of this
    therapy outweigh the risks, thrombolytic therapy
    for acute stroke should be restricted to use
    within formal research protocols or in monitored
    practice protocols that adhere to the NINDS
    eligibility criteria

119
  • Stroke thrombolysis should be limited to centers
    with appropriate neurological and neuro-imaging
    resources that are capable of administering
    treatment within 3 hours
  • In such centers, emergency physicians should
    identify eligible patients, initiate low risk
    interventions and facilitate prompt CT scanning
  • Only physicians with demonstrated expertise in
    neuroradiology should interpret head CT scans
    used to determine whether to administer
    thrombolytic agents to stroke patients.
  • Neurologists should be directly involved prior to
    the thrombolytic administration

120
So what can we do?
  • The Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians
    enthusiastically endorses the promotion of stroke
    therapies where the benefits clearly outweigh the
    risks. These include the use of ASA, prevention
    of aspiration, early rehabilitation, and the
    establishment of stroke units and protocols

121
Intra-arterial Thrombolyis
  • Still in experimental stages
  • Prospective, randomized, placebo control trial
    used intra-arterial r-prourokinase successful in
    recanalizing more frequently but had increased
    risk of intracranial bleeding
  • Del Zoppo et al. Gent M. PROACT a phase II
    randomized trial of recombinant pro-urokinase by
    dircet arterial devlivery in acute middle
    cerebral artery stroke PROACT investigators
    Prolyse in Acute Cerebral Thrombolembolism.
    Stroke. 1998 294-11
  • May be used in occlusion of large intracranial
    arteries basilar or middle cerebral
  • Requires adequate equipment and skilled clinician

122
Summary
123
Summary
  • Be familiar with stroke patterns
  • Be familiar with general medical management of
    stroke patients
  • Controversy regarding Thrombolytic therapy
  • Thanks to Dr. Ian Rigby for his help

124
References
  • EMR Sept 29,1997. Stroke Comprehensive
    Guidelines for Clinical Assessment and Emergency
    Management (Part 1)
  • EMR Oct 13, 1997. Stroke Comprehensive
    Guidelines for Clinical Assessment and Emergency
    Management (Part II)
  • Thrombolysis for acute ischaemic stroke. Wardlaw
    JM et al. Conhrane Database of Systematic
    Reviews. 3, 2003
  • Position Statement on Thrombolytic Therapy for
    Acute Ischemic Stroke, The CAEP Committee on
    Thrombolytic Therapy for Acute Ischemic Stroke
    http//www.caep.ca/002.policies/002-01.guidelines/
    thrombolytic.htm
  • Hacke W, Kaste M, Fieschi C, Toni D, Lesaffre E,
    von Kummer R, et al. Intravenous thrombolysis
    with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator for
    acute hemispheric stroke, the European
    cooperative acute stroke study (ECASS). JAMA
    19952741017-25
  • The National Institute of Neurological Disorders
    and Stroke rt-PA Stroke Study Group. Tissue
    plasminogen activator for acute ischemic stroke.
    N Engl J Med 19953331581
  • Hacke W, Kaste M, Fieschi C, von Kummer R,
    Davalos A, Meier D et al. Randomised double-blind
    placebo-controlled trial of thrombolytic therapy
    with intravenous alteplase in acute ischaemic
    stroke (ECASS II). Lancet 19983521245-51
  • Furlan A, Higashida R, Wechsler L, Gent M, Rowley
    H, Kase C, et al. Intra-arterial prourokinase for
    acute ischemic stroke. The PROACT II study a
    randomized controlled trial. JAMA 19992822003-11

125
References
  • Clark WM, Wissman S, Albers GW, Jhamandas JH,
    Madden KP, Hamilton S. Recombinant tissue-type
    plasminogen activator (Alteplase) for ischemic
    stroke 3 to 5 hours after symptom onset. (The
    alteplase thrombolysis for acute
    noninterventional therapy for ischemic stroke
    ATLANTIS study). JAMA 19992822019-26
  • Taking the Initiative! An ED Based Stroke Team in
    a Community Teaching Hospital Jonathan A. Maise
    http//emedhome.com/features_archive-detail.cfm?SF
    ID090400SFTIDnews
  • Schmidley JW, Messing RO. Agitated confusional
    states inpatients with right hemispheric
    infarctions. Stroke 1984 15 883
  • Rosens Emergency Medicine 5th edition

126
Extras
127
SAH High attenuation is seen diffusely within the
sulci on a noncontrasted head CT. High
attenuation collections are also present within
the occipital horns of the lateral ventricles.
Moderate hydrocephalus is present
128
Embolic stroke
129
Motor Homunculus
130
Vascular Territory
  • Among patients undergoing angiography for
    atherosclerotic stroke
  • 62 Internal Carotid Artery
  • 15 Vertebrobasilar Arteries
  • 10 Middle Cerebral Artery
  • Schmidley JW, Messing RO. Agitated confusional
    states inpatients with right hemispheric
    infarctions. Stroke 1984 15 883

131
  • Attacks in the ICA distribution that involve the
    dominant hemisphere may present with symptoms
    such as motor dysfunction, amaurosis fugax,
    numbness, and/or aphasia
  • in the distribution of the ICA of the
    non-dominant hemisphere have similar
    symptomatology but without aphasia

132
Clinical Features
  • Sudden devlpt of focal neurological deficit
  • Transient loss of consciousness is rare
  • Seizure
  • Headache in a minority of patients

133
Atrial Fibrillation
  • Patients with A. Fib are 5 to 17 times more
    likely to develop stroke than those who do not
    have A. Fib
  • Strokes resulting from A. Fib are more likely to
    involve large cerebral vessels, be more severe,
    and have a higher mortality than non-A. Fib
    strokes
  • Jorgensen HS et al Acute stroke with atrial
    fibrillation the Copenhagen Stroke study, Stroke
    10 1765, 1996
  • LiuHJ et al Stroke severity in atrial
    fibrillation the Framingham study, Stroke 27,
    1760, 1996

134
National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale
  • Quantifies neurologic deficit, found to be
    reproducible and valid
  • Correlates well with amount of infarcted tissue
    on CT scan
  • Baseline NIHSS can determine pts appropriate for
    fibrinolytic therapy and those at risk of
    increased hemorrhage
  • NINDS trial of r-tPA score of gt20 had a 17
    chance of ICH, risk of bleeding was only 3 if
    lt10
  • Prognostic tool to predict outcome
  • Brott T Utility of the NIH Stroke Scale,
    Cerebrovasc Dis 2241, 1992
  • Adams HP et al. Baseline NIHSS score strongly
    predicts outcome after stroke. Neurology. 1999
    53126-131
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