CVA Flashcards

1
Q

What does the ACA supply

A

the medial surfaces of the frontal and parietal lobe

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2
Q

what does the MCA supply

A

lateral surfaces of the frontal, temporal and parietal lobes and insula

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3
Q

what does the PCA supply

A

occipital lobe
midbrain
thalamus
medial surfaces of parietal and temporal lobes

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4
Q

what do the vertebral arteries supply?

A

superior cerebellar artery, inferior cerebellar artery

posterior inferior cerebellar artery

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5
Q

what do the basilar arteries supply

A

pons

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6
Q

symptoms of damage to the ACA

A
LE hemiplegia > UE hemiparesis
Hemisensory loss
Urinary incontinence
perseveration
lack of spontaneity/motor inaction
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7
Q

symptoms of damage to the MCA

A
Facial involvement
UE hemplegia > LE
Partial or complete hemisensory loss
Homonomous hemanopsia
Agnosias
Unilateral neglect
Aphasias
Other perceptual deficits
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8
Q

symptoms of damage to the PCA

A
Homonomous hemianopsia
Cortical blindness
Weber’s syndrome (CN III on ipsilateral, contralateral hemiplegia due to cerebral peduncle)
Hemisensory loss
Memory deficit
Visual spatial deficits
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9
Q

symptoms of damage to the vertebrals

A
ataxia
CNV-XII
Swallowing
Dizziness
Nausea
Dysarthria
Nystagmus
Facial sensory loss on same side
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10
Q

symptoms of damage to the basilar artery

A

Infarct of pons
“locked in syndrome”
Disrupts corticobulbar and corticospinal tracts (quadriplegia)
Paralysis of lower cranial nerves
• Complete LIS: quadriplegia and anarthria. No eye movement
• Classic LIS: preserved vertical eye movement and blinking (CN III function spared)
• Incomplete LIS: recovery of some voluntary movements in addition to eye movements

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11
Q

Right hemisphere damage

A
Left hemiplegia
Perceptual problems
Often impulsive
Lack of awareness of deficits
Neglect
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12
Q

Left hemisphere damage

A
Motor and sensory losses
Abnormal tone
Depression and fatigue
Emotional lability
	Right hemiplegia
Cautious
Slow movement
Communication deficits
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13
Q

What do both right and left hemisphere damage share?

A

Motor and sensory losses
Abnormal tone
Depression and fatigue
Emotional lability

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14
Q

What type of stroke is more common

A

ischemic strokes

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15
Q

types of ischemic strokes

A

embolic
thrombotic
hypoxic
lacunar

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16
Q

what kind of stroke is more deadly but has a better recovery

A

hemorrhagic

17
Q

types of hemorrhagic strokes

A

primary intercerebral
aneurysms
ateriovenous malformatins

18
Q

describe embolic strokes

A

type of ischemic stroke
Most common of ischemic strokes
o Very quick onset
o Emboli usually arise in heart

19
Q

describe thrombotic strokes

A

type of ischemic stroke
o Forms mostly at bifurcations
o Sudden onset or slower evolution
o Many times occurs during sleep

20
Q

describe hypoxic strokes

A

type of ischemic stroke

due to shock, severe blood loss or cardiac arrest

21
Q

describe lacunar strokes

A
type of ischemic stroke
o	Small vessel disease
o	Due to untreated HTN
o	Multiple tiny areas of damage
o	Occurs mostly in basal ganglia
	Results in dense hemiplegia/hemisensory loss
22
Q

desvribe primary intercerebral sto

A

type of hemorrhagic stroke
due to HTM
if bleed is > 5 cm there is too much herniation and prognosis is not good

23
Q

describe aneurysms

A

type of hemorrhagic stroke
ballooining of vessel and thinning of the wall
can be congentital or degenerative
subarachnoid bleed can occur

24
Q

describe an arteriovenous malformation

A

type of hemorrhagic stroke
abnormal connection between artery and vein with thin walls so that the pressure is too high
you are usually born with this but the bleed occurs in the 20s and 30s

25
Q

what is a subarachanoid bleed

A

usually a slower bleed aneurysm of the vein

prognosis is better than an aneurysm

26
Q

What is a CVA

A

insufficient blood supply to the brain leading to death of neurons

27
Q

What is a TIA

A

neurologic deficits due to TEMPORARY ischemia lasting for minutes to hours and followed by complete restoration of function withing 24 hours
it is a warning sign

28
Q

what is a RIND

A

reversible ischemic neurological deficit

resolves in > 24 hours but

29
Q

typical problems and phenomenon of strokes

A
neuromuscular impairments
apraxias
somatosensory dysfunction
visual dysfunction
perceptual dysfunction
oral, speech and language disorders
cognitive deficits
emotional aspects
fatigue
perservation
dizziness or vertigo
incontinence
sexuality
family/social
30
Q

what is unilateral negelct

A

involuntary lack of attention to stimuli
often seen more often with right hemisphere damage
can be combined with homonymous hemianopsia

31
Q

what is denervation supersenstivity

A

neurons become more sensitive to inputs

32
Q

what is regenerative synaptogenesis

A

injured axons begin sproutingq

33
Q

what is reactive synaptogenesis

A

collateral sprouting

neighboring normal axons sprout to innervate synaptic sites taht were previously atcivated by injured axons

34
Q

What is the importance of these mechanisms?

A

neural plasticity