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Myocardial damage in patients with SAH

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10% patient lethal arrhythmia (ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, ... Grade 1: Asymptomatic or mild headache and slight nuchal rigidity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Myocardial damage in patients with SAH


1
Myocardial damage in patients with SAH
  • Ri ???

2
After SAH
  • 27-100 patient ? EKG change
  • 40 patient ? CK-MB cardiac Troponin I ?
  • 10 patient ? lethal arrhythmia (ventricular
    tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, torsades
    de pointes)
  • 10 patient ? left ventricular (LV) wall motion
    abnormalities by cardiac echo a subset of these
    patients will have irreversible myocardial
    damage, but most regain LV function in several
    weeks

3
History
  • 1903, Cushing cardiac effects of intracranial
    hemorrhage (alterations in blood pressure and
    cardiac rhythm)
  • 1947, Byer et al ECG changes in a patient with
    subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)
  • 1954 cerebral T wave in patient with SAH

4
EKG change after SAH
  • large and inverted T waves ("cerebral T waves")
  • prolonged QT intervals
  • Marked QT prolongation, sometimes with deep, wide
    T-wave inversions, may occur with intracranial
    bleeds, particularly subarachnoid hemorrhage
    ("CVA T-wave" pattern)
  • Others ST segment alterations, Q waves

5
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6
Prolonged QT intervals
  • most common stroke-related EKG abnormality (in
    71 of patients with SAH )
  • QT prolonged ?serious ventricular arrhythmias
    including sudden death torsade de pointes

7
T wave abnormalities
  • The suggestion that these abnormalities are
    neurally induced is supported by the observation
    that inverted T waves may normalize if brain
    death occurs.
  • Furthermore, inverted or flat T waves have been
    reported in 55 percent of patients with
    subarachnoid hemorrhage, but autopsy studies of
    these patients have failed to reveal any
    underlying cardiac abnormality.

8
Pathophysiology
  • The pathophysiology of cardiac injury after SAH
    remains controversial.
  • Coronary artery disease (CAD) and coronary
    vasospasm as possible mechanisms?
  • 1. some SAH patients have ECG and
    echocardiographic findings ? no angiographic
    evidence of CAD or vasospasm
  • 2. myocardial ischemia secondary to excessive
    tachycardia and/or hypertension

9
  • Catecholamine hypothesis?
  • 1. A series of autopsy studies in patients with
    SAH (with/without EKG change) ? petechial
    subendocardial hemorrhage, and histologically,
    myocardial cell cytoplasm with dense eosinophilic
    transverse bands
  • Similar lesion
  • 1.patient with pheochromocytoma
    2.experimental animals with infusion of
    catecholamines and stimulation stellate ganglion

10
  • 2. Patterns of LV wall motion abnormalities in
    SAH patients are atypical of CAD but may
    correlate with the distribution of myocardial
    sympathetic nerve terminals
  • 3. Myocardial injury is most likely the result of
    a centrally mediated release of catecholamines
    due to hypoperfusion of the posterior
    hypothalamus.

11
Predictors of neurocardiogenic injury after SAH
  • cTnI is much more sensitive than CK-MB (100
    compared with 29) in the detection of left
    ventricular dysfunction in patients with SAH.
  • An elevated level of cTnI is a good indicator of
    left ventricular dysfunction in patients with
    SAH.

12
  • The degree of neurological injury as measured by
    the Hunt-Hess grade is a strong, independent
    predictor of myocardial necrosis after SAH. This
    finding supports the hypothesis that cardiac
    injury after SAH is a neurally mediated process.

13
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14
Hunt-Hess score
  • Grade 1 Asymptomatic or mild headache and slight
    nuchal rigidity
  • Grade 2 Moderate to severe headache, stiff neck,
    no neurologic deficit except cranial nerve palsy
  • Grade 3 Drowsy or confused, mild focal
    neurologic deficit
  • Grade 4 Stupor, moderate or severe hemiparesis
  • Grade 5 Deep coma, decerebrate posturing
  • The grade is advanced one level for the presence
    of serious systemic disease (hypertension,
    diabetes, severe arteriosclerosis, chronic
    pulmonary disease) or vasospasm on angiography

15
Conclusion
  • If EKG abnormalities develop during
    hospitalization, the heart of a patient with SAH
    who has brain death is not accepted as a donor
    organ because of the possibility of cardiac
    abnormalities.
  • This cardiac dysfunction was reversible and
    should not necessarily preclude these patients
    from undergoing operative interventions or
    becoming heart donors.

16
References
  • 1. Stroke. 2004 35 548-552
  • 2. Circulation. 2005 112(21)3314-3319
  • 3. J. Neurosurg. 2003 98741-746
  • 4. UpToDate
  • 5. Harrisons Principle of Internal Medicine,
  • 16th edition, chapter 210

17
Thank you for your attention!
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