Title: Clinical presentation and diagnosis Stroke and TIA
1Clinical presentation and diagnosis
Stroke and TIA
- Diane Ames
- Cons Stroke Physician
- Imperial College
2Format
- Definitions
- TIA clinical features and mimics
- Differential diagnoses
- Stroke clinical features and mimics
- Differential diagnoses
3Classic TIA definition
- A clinical syndrome
- Acute loss of focal cerebral or monocular
function - Symptoms last lt 24 hours
- Due to inadequate cerebral or ocular blood supply
4Aetiology of TIA
- Results from
- Low blood flow from
- Arterial thrombosis or embolism assoc with
- disease of arteries, heart or blood
- Note
- Stroke risk following a TIA is maximal at 7-14
days
5 Controversies
- 24 hour time cut-off is arbitory
- Majority of TIAs last much lt 60 minutes
- Some/not all TIAs show radiological evidence of
cerebral infarction - Proposals for imaging-based diagnosis but
-
6Common clinical features of TIA
- Unilateral weakness, clumsiness, heaviness of
- One, both limbs or just hand
50 - Unilateral sensory loss
- numbness, tingling, dead
35 - Speech loss - dysarthria
23 - - dysphasia
18
- Transient monocular blindness, blurring
18
7Less common clinical symptoms
- Unsteadiness 12
- Vertigo
5 - Homonymous hemianopia 5
- Diplopia
5 - Bilateral Limb weakness 4
- But NOT in isolation..
8May see emboli in absence of clinical signs
9 Symptoms in isolation
- Imbalance
- Simultaneous bilateral weakness
- Slurred speech
- Rotational vertigo
- Double vision
- A sensation of movement
- Do not necessarily indicate focal ischaemia
(without a relevant CI or PICH or additional
focal symptoms.)
10Non- focal symptoms
- Faintness
- Dizziness
- Very rarely due to focal cerebral ischaemia
- More likely due to
- Syncope
- Non-vascular causes eg drugs
11Symptom duration
- If symptoms last gtone hour , complete recovery
likely to take gt 24 hours - Recurrent stroke more likely
- Sensory symptoms lasting lt 1 minute unlikely to
support diagnosis of TIA - ?minimum duration for TIA 10 mins? but
- Symptoms of retinal ischaemia may be very
short-lived
12Risk stratification- in the 7 days after TIA
- High risk ABCD2 score of 4 or
- Crescendo TIAs (2 or more TIAs in a week)
- Treat with aspirin and investigate within 24
hours - Low risk score of 3 or less
- Treat with aspirin and investigate within 7 days
- NICE, RCP and
HfL performance Indicator
13 ABCD2 score
14(No Transcript)
15Reconstructed CTA showing Carotid stenosis at
bifurcation
16Differential Diagnoses of TIAs
- Other causes of sudden and focal ischaemia
- Migraine with aura
- Metabolic- especially hypoglycaemia
- Partial seizures
- Structural intra-cranial abnormality
- Labyrinthine disorders (Menieres or BPV)
- Peripheral nerve /c.spine lesions
- Demyelinating disease
- Psychological
17Non-vascular diagnoses OXVASC
2002-2004
- Migraine 25
- Anxiety 14
- Seizure 9
- Periph Neuropathy 8
- Arrhythmia 6
- Labyrinthine 6
- Postural hypotension 6
- TGA 6
- Syncope 5
- Tumour or mets 4
- C Spine disease 3
18Cervical arterial dissection
- Not uncommon
- Carotid or vertebral
- After neck injury, extension, manipulation,
hairdressers - P/w pain neck, side of head
- Horners?
19Headaches TIAs ?
- Mild headache is common 1/6 TIAs
- Usually ipsilateral to affected carotid territory
- Most common in posterior territory TIAs
- Note haemorhagic TIAs are rare but do exist
20Headache bilateral - TIA unlikely
21Epidemiology
- 20 strokes preceded by TIA Rothwell Warlow
2007 - OXVASC 2005, n 91,000
- Stroke incidence 2.3/1000
- Definite TIAs, incidence 0.5/1000
- But TIA referral rates 3.0/1000 (mimics)
- Incidence of cerebro-vascular events similar to
- acute vascular coronary events Rothwell et
al 2005 -
22Risk Factors for ischaemic stroke or TIA
- Non- modifiable
- Age
- Sex
- Race
- Previous stroke or TIA
- Modifiable
- Life style factors
- Social deprivation
- Obesity, diet, exercise, alcohol, smoking
23Risk Factors for ischaemic stroke or TIA
- Hypertension
- Diabetes
- Atrial Fibrillation
- IHD and LV dysfunction
- Valvular HD,PAD
- Invasive procedures/post surgery
- Embolic sources- carotid stenoses, PFO
- Dyslipidaemia
24Other vascular risk factors
- Thrombophilias
- Chronic infections retroviral disease
- Hyper viscosity malignancies
- Vasculitidies
- Sickle cell
- Recreational drugs
- Genetic
25 Localisation
26(No Transcript)
27Vascular territory
- 80 carotid 20 vertebro-basilar
- Implications for Ix and secondary prevention
- Often difficult to differentiate as motor
sensory symptoms supplied by both systems - DW MRI very helpful when positive
28From a PFO
29Causes of transient monocular loss
- Include
- TIA
- Glaucoma
- Raised ICP
- Retinal haemorrhage/detachment/venous thrombosis
- Intra-orbital tumour
- We have all ours seen at Western Eye Hospital
30Posterior circulation symptoms
- Vertigo
- Diplopia
- Dysphagia
- Unsteadiness
- Tinnitus,
- Dysarthria
- Drop attacks
- Usually need 2 symptoms
- to localise to POC
- Mimics common here
- MRI very helpful to aid differentiation
-
31 Clinical signs of TIA
- Often non-existent when examined
- History important
- More commonly seen earlier with FAST/999 calls
- Retinal emboli, cardiac dysrhythmias, PVD may
help elucidate the cause
32 Gold standard
- No confirmatory test for TIA
- Neither on imaging or blood tests
- Gold standard is a thorough assessment by
experienced physician asap after event
33Diagnostic Clues for TIA?
34Some diagnostic clues
- TIAs largely negative symptoms
- Good careful history essential
- Seizures positive motor symptoms
- Migraines positive visual spectra
- Tumours stuttering onset
- Syncope non-focal (LoC)
- Course fluctuating with tumour
35Summary - TIA
- Negative symptoms
- Abrupt onset, maximal in few seconds
- Antecedent headache, nausea unusual (unless neck
pain) - Few signs
- Frequent stereotyped attacks more likely to be
seizures
36RCP guidelines 2008
- Consider any patient p/w transient neurological
symptoms of CV nature to have had a TIA - All suspected TIAs require (ABCD 2) within 24
hours - All high risk (ABCD 2 risk4 or gt )should receive
aspirin 300mg immediately and specialist
assessment and investigation in 24 hours - 24/7 pathways available pan London
37(No Transcript)
38Clinical features and diagnosis of acute stroke
39Blurred vision
- 57 year civil servant
- Unable to see PC
- Went to WEH. Eyes fine . Referred SMH
- CT scan occipital stroke ( FAST Negative!)
- Ventricular standstill.
- PPM inserted
40Stroke diagnostic criteria
- A clinical syndrome
- Rapidly developing clinical symptoms
- Focal or sometimes global loss(e.g. deep coma)
of brain function - Loss of cerebral function
- Symptoms last gt 24 hours or leading to death
- Of apparent vascular origin
41General comments
- Often fairly straight foward diagnosis
- BEWARE mimics errors have consequences
- Localisation of site helps with targeting
investigation - Clues from accurate history and examination
- Care to identify potential non-vascular cause
42Stroke onset/progress
- If focal neurological deficit of sudden onset or
on waking stroke diagnosis likely - If time of onset unknown cannot thrombolyse
- May progress over minutes or hours especially
POCS - Deficit usually stabilises over 12-24 hours, if
patient survives - Recovery starts usually in a few days
43 Diagnosis uncertain
Beware
- Fever
- Headaches, seizures, deficit worsening over days
- Head injury, falls
- On warfarin, especially with alcohol history
- Known primary tumour elsewhere
- Peripheral nerve lesion and pain
- Neck injury neck pain
44Misses occipital strokes and those with leg
weakness
45Recognition of stroke Rosier
46Differential diagnosis of acute stroke
- HT encephalopathy
- Head Neck injury
- Peripheral Nerve lesion
- MS
- Psychogenic
- abscess, viral encephalitis
- Subdural haematoma
- Epileptic seizure
- Metabolic
- Syncope
- Systemic Sepsis
- Structural intracranial lesion
47 Top 5 differential diagnoses of
Stroke TIA
- The 5 Ss
- Seizure
- Syncope
- Sepsis
- SDH
- Somatization
48 Mimics.. In an alcoholic
49After a fall , patient on warfarin but had been
to pub!
50 The ideal rapid stroke pathway
- Detection -recognition of stroke
- Dispatch -call 999 priority LAS
- Delivery -prompt transport pre-hospital
notification - Door - Immediate triage
- Data - Assessment, bloods, imaging
- Decision - Diagnosis decision re therapy
- Drug - Appropriate drug/other
intervention - Adams et al. AHA Guidelines Stroke
2007381655-1711
51Why the rush?- ischaemic penumbra
Core of dead tissue
Poorly perfused penumbra
Ischaemic /poorly perfused brain cells may be
saved from
infarction by prompt treatment
52Favourable outcome at 3/12(i.e. Modified
Rankin 0 or 1, pooled ATLANTIS, ECASS
NINDS
53 Thrombolysis
- Alteplase via i/v route
- On-licence
- Patients who meet inclusion criteria and are able
to receive treatment lt 3 hours on licence - In trial
- lt 6 hours IST-3
- Highly effective (only 10 people need to be
treated to prevent 1 becoming dead or disabled)
54Stroke clinical classification
- Total anterior circulation syndrome TACS
- Partial anterior circulation PACS
- Lacunar Syndrome LACS
- Posterior circulation syndrome POCS
- Gives some prognostic information based on
territory
55 TACs
- Usually caused by large infarct (or haemorrhage)
affecting large proportion of MCA territory - Findings
- Contralateral hemiparesis
- An homonymous visual field defect
- Cortical deficits (dysphasia, neglect or
visuo-spatial problems)
56Massive TACS 47 year male RF
Hypertension Developed Malignant
MCA Hemicraniectomy
57Post surgery Malignant MCA syndrome
58 PACS
- More restricted than TACS
- Clinically any two of TACs features or
- Isolated cortical deficits eg dysphasia
- Cause is often cardioembolic and thus risk of
recurrence - Investigate quickly
59(No Transcript)
60Haemorrhage in (L) MCA territory
61 Lacunar syndromes LACS
- Usually small, deep lesions secondary to
hypertension - Clinical features include deficits of
- Pure motor deficit - 2 or 3 of face, arm, leg
- Pure sensory deficit -
- Sensorimotor deficit -
- Ataxic hemiparesis- clumsy hand syndrome
62(L) hemispheric lacune
63 POCS
- Brainstem,cerebellar,occipital lobe thalamic
signs - Motor/or sensory cranial nerve palsies
- Bilateral motor/or sensory deficits
- Loss of conjugate gaze
- Isolated hemianopia or cortical blindness
64Large occipital infarction
65Cerebellar syndromes
- Mild sudden vertigo, nausea, imbalance and
horizontal nystagmus - More extensive ipsilateral weakness truncal
ataxia - Very Severe headache, vomiting, reduced
conscious level - Urgent imaging is mandatory
- Risk of hydrocephalus
- Can miss if you dont check gait!
66 Cerebellar Infarct 50 year female RF
Hypertension
67Thalamic strokes
- Variety of syndromes according to nuclei affected
and vascular territory. - Sensory/sensori-motor /-ataxia
- Paralysis of upward gaze, small pupils, reduced
consciousness,hypersomnolence - Often p/w acute onset behavioural disturbances
68(L) Thalamic stroke Light-bulb sign on DW MRI
69Haemorrhagic strokes
- Clinically indistinguishable from infarcts
- Always consider when on warfarin
- When p/w acute headache esp with nausea/vomiting
posterior symptoms - Cerebellar haemorrhages maydevelop hydrocephalus
70These scans were 3
hours apart
What drug was he taking?
7152 year lady Old (L) haemorrhage MCA aneurysm
on
72Diagnostic considerations
- Gradual onset unusual
- Head neck trauma?
- Headache 25, mild, localised to lesion site
- Early seizures are unusual
- If impaired consciousness but only mild focal
loss- stroke less likely - Chest pain/ECG changes and focal loss -
- 5-10 strokes/concurrent MI
- Care when on warfarin
73 Thank you
Primary prevention remains best strategy