30
Cerebral hemorrhage Cerebral hemorrhage

Cerebral Hemorrhage

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Cerebral hemorrhageCerebral hemorrhage

Page 2: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Etiology and pathogenesis Etiology and pathogenesis

Hypertension and arteriosclerosisAtherosclerosis, bleeding tendency

(hemophilia, leukemia, aplastic anemia, thrombocytopenia), congenital angiomatous malformation, arteritis, tumor

lenticulostriate arteries vertical to MCAMicroaneurysms → rupture

Page 3: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Pathology Pathology

Site: basal ganglia (70%), brain lobe, brain stem, cerebellum

Lateral hemorrhage: the bleeding is confined lateral to the internal capsule (lenticular nucleus, external capsule)

Medial hemorrhage: thalamus hematoma →edema →herniation hematoma →stroke capsule

Page 4: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Clinical featureClinical feature

Age: 50-70Male > femaleOccur at physical exertion or excitementSudden onset of focal signsUsually accompanied by headache and

vomiting May have consciousness disturbance

Page 5: Cerebral Hemorrhage

1. Putamen hemorrhagecontralateral hemiplegia, hemianesthesia,

and hemianopiaEyes are frequently deviated toward the

side of the affected hemisphereAphasia if dominant hemisphere is affected

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 6: Cerebral Hemorrhage

2. Thalamus hemorrhage contralateral hemiplegia, hemianesthesia,

and hemianopiaDeep sensation disturbanceOcular signsDisturbance of consciousness

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 7: Cerebral Hemorrhage

3. Pontine hemorrhageMild: crossed paralysisSevere (>5ml) coma pinpoint pupils hyperpyrexia tetraplegia die in 48 hours

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 8: Cerebral Hemorrhage

4. Cerebellar hemorrhageOccipital headache, intense vertigo and

repeated vomiting, ataxia, nystagmusSevere cerebellar hemorrhage : coma,

compression of brain stem, tonsillar herniation

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 9: Cerebral Hemorrhage

5. Lobar hemorrhageSeen in AVM, Moyamoya disease, Headache, vomiting, neck stiffnessSeizureFocal signs

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 10: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Investigation Investigation

1. CT First choice High density blood Mass effect and edema High density →

isodensity → low density

Page 11: Cerebral Hemorrhage

2. MRIBrain stem hemorrhage<24h, not distinguishable with thrombosis3. DSAYoung and with normal blood pressure4. CSFBloodyDone only when the CT is not available and

without increased ICP

Investigation Investigation

Page 12: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Diagnosis Diagnosis

Age >50, with hypertensionSudden onset of headache, vomiting, focal

signOccur at physical exertion or excitementCT: high density blood

Page 13: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Differential diagnosisDifferential diagnosis

Coma: poisoning, hypoglycemia, hepatic or diabetic coma

Focal signs: cerebral infarction, brain tumor, subdural hematoma, SAH

Page 14: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Treatment Treatment

1.Keep rest, monitoring, air way, good nursing

2. Keep electrolytes and fluid balance.

3. Reduce ICP: 20% Mannitol 125-250ml, 3 to 4 times per

dayFurosemide, albumin, dexamathasone

Page 15: Cerebral Hemorrhage

4. Control hypertension: <180/105mmHg in acute stage, ACEI, beta-blocker

5. Prevent complications:Infection:antibioticsgastric hemorrhage: Cimetidine, LosecVenous thrombosis: heparin

Treatment Treatment

Page 16: Cerebral Hemorrhage

6. Surgical therapy: Putamen, lobar: >40-50 ml, deterioratingCerebellum: >15ml, diameter>3cmThalamus: obstructive hydrocephalus

→ventricular drainage

7. Rehabilitation

Treatment Treatment

Page 17: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Subarachnoid hemorrhageSubarachnoid hemorrhageSAHSAH

Page 18: Cerebral Hemorrhage

SAH SAH

Cranial bone → dura mater → arachnoid → pia mater → brain lobe

Primary spontaneous SAH

Traumatic SAHSecondary to cerebral

hemorrhage

Page 19: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Etiology Etiology

1. Intracranial saccular aneurysm 2. AVM (arteriovenous malformation) 3. Hypertension and atherosclerosis4. Moyamoya disease5. Mycotic aneurysm, tumor, polyarteritis

nodasa, bleeding disease

Page 20: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Pathology Pathology

Anterior cerebral and anterior communicating

Internal carotid Middle cerebralBasilar

Page 21: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Clinical featureClinical feature

1. Age of onset: Saccular aneurysm: adult 30-60 AVM: juvenile Hypertension: more than 60

2. Prodromal symptoms Warning leaks: headache, vomiting Cranial nerve paralysis: oculomotor

Page 22: Cerebral Hemorrhage

3. Acute SAHSudden onset of severe headache: “explode,

burst, the worst of my life”VomitingAssociated with physical exertion, excitementTransient loss of consciousness or comaPain of neck, back, legMental symptoms: apathy, lethargy, delirium

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 23: Cerebral Hemorrhage

3. Acute SAHSigns of meningeal irritation: neck stiffness,

positive Kernig’s signFundus examination: papilloedema,

sub-hyaloid hemorrhageCranial nerve palsy

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 24: Cerebral Hemorrhage

4. Delayed neurologic deficitsRerupture: in first 4 weeks, again has severe

headache, vomiting, unconsciousness, with poor outcome. Due to fibrinolysis

Cerebrovascular spasm: 4-15 days after initial SAH, → cerebral infarction →disturbance of consciousness and focal signs

Hydrocephalus: 2-3 weeks after SAH, → gait difficulty, incontinence, dementia

Clinical featureClinical feature

Page 25: Cerebral Hemorrhage

InvestigationInvestigation

1. CTSubarachnoid clot in

75% of cases

Page 26: Cerebral Hemorrhage

2. CSFUniformly blood-stainedXanthochromia: 12 hours to 2-3 weeks ICP ↑

3. DSA: etiologic diagnosis, important to surgery

4. MRA, CTA

InvestigationInvestigation

Page 27: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Diagnosis Diagnosis

Sudden onset of severe headache, vomitingNeck stiffness, positive Kernig’s signUniformly blood stained CSFCT shows subarachnoid clot

Page 28: Cerebral Hemorrhage

Differential diagnosisDifferential diagnosis

Cerebral hemorrhageMeningitisTumorPsychosis

Page 29: Cerebral Hemorrhage

TreatmentTreatment

1. General management Absolute bed rest for 4-6 weeksPrevent constipation, excitementSedatives and analgesics

2. Reduce ICPMannitol, Furosemide, albumin

Page 30: Cerebral Hemorrhage

3. Prevent reruptureAntifibrinolytic drugs: EACA for 3 weeks

4. Prevent cerebrovascular spasmNimodipine, flunarizine

5. Lumbar puncture to replace CSF

6. Surgery: within 24-72 hours

TreatmentTreatment