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GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

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Page 1: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

GP Lecture Programme3 February 2010

Dr Stephen Louw

Stroke Physician

RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Page 2: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Population Relative Risk for Stroke

• High ABCD2 score: 8% chance in next 2 days• AF 5 – 17x (if >2 risk factors, 18% stroke p.y.)• Hypertension 3-4• Alcohol 4 • Migraine: 2.16• IHD 2-4• CCF 2-4• Diabetes 2-4 • Smoking 1.5-2.9• Hyperlipidaemia – uncertain as a sole risk• PFO 26% of general population have a PFO.

Page 3: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Commonest TIAs

Middle Cerebral Artery Territory• Total or partial anterior Circulation TIA

– Hemiplegia/hemianaeasthesia

– Homonymous hemi-anopia

– Cortical problem: dysphasia/visual or sensory neglect

• Lacunar-type: pure motor or sensory or mixed• Amaurosis fugax• Post circulation (difficult to diagnose)

Page 4: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Middle Cerebral Artery TerritoryThe focus of ABCD2 scale

Validation and refinement of scores to predict very early stroke risk after TIA: Johnston SC, Rothwell PM et al. Lancet 2007. Jan. 27:369:283-92.

ABCD2

Score

2-day risk 7-day risk 90-day risk

5 4.1% 5.9 9.8

7 8.1% 11.7 17.8

Page 5: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Middle Cerebral Artery TerritoryThe focus of ABCD2 scale

The focus of investigations in hospital:

• Identify patients with critical internal carotid artery stenosis

• Rapid referral for carotid endarterectomy

• CEA– Benefits: reduces stroke risk by 50%– Risks: immediate death or stroke: 2 – 3%

Page 6: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Carotid Endarterectomy European Carotid Surgery Trialists’ Collaboration Group (ECTST) The Lancet

1998;351:1379-87 CLASSIC PAPER

• Patients with recent TIA or stroke and 70 – 99% carotid stenosis clearly benefit in terms of stroke prevention. Confirmed NASCET (1991)

• Pts with <70% stenosis were harmed by CEA.• NNT (surgery) 14 pts to prevent a major

ipsilateral carotid territory stroke over the next 5 years.

Page 7: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Limb shaking TIA

• 1-2 min duration• Usually severe carotid

stenosis• Often good surgical

candidates• Differential diagnosis• Partial seizure• Tremor

Page 8: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Capsular warning TIAGeoffrey Donnan (Australia) Neurology 1993;43:957

• 4.5% of TIAs • Ischemia due to

haemodynamic phenomena in a diseased, single, small penetrating vessel

• Leads to lacunar infarct and involved a single penetrating vessel

Page 9: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Posterior Circulation TIA

POCS TIA is more likely if:

         true diplopia

         DDK

         past pointing

         Dysarthria

Page 10: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Posterior Circulation TIA

Low predictive rate for POCS TIA if:

Isolated features of• ‘Dizziness’,• unsteadiness,• vertigo or• ‘ataxia’.

                                 

Page 11: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Transient Global Amnesia

• Sudden onset of disorientation – amnesia for immediate events

• Speech intact

• No other focal neurology

• Resolves within minutes

Page 12: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Unusual types of Migraine

Ocular migraine• Transient loss of

vision• Usually with headache

Basilar type migraine• Affects both sides• Rarely motor signs• Aura may include:

– Blindness– Vertigo– Diplopia– Dysarthria– Ataxia

Page 13: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Stroke

Page 14: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Rapid recognition of symptoms and diagnosis

Reproduced with permission from The Stroke Association

– Use the FAST tool to screen for stroke or TIA outside hospital

Page 15: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

How accurate is FAST?Diagnostic Accuracy of Stroke Referrals…J Harbison, O Hossain, D Jenkinson, J Davis, SJ Louw, GA Ford.Stroke 2003;34:71-76

• 487 patients; 356 stroke/TIA• FAST used by ambulance paramedics

– 23% = non-stroke– 46% admitted within 3 hours

• Primary Care Doctors– 29% = non-stroke– 14% admitted within 3 hours

• ER– 29% = non-stroke

Page 16: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Limitations of FAST

• Does not take pre-existing disability into account

• Low sensitivity for posterior circulation strokes: – occipital lobes (vision)– cerebellum (often no weakness)– brain stem (sensory deficit, cranial nerve

lesions)

Page 17: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

TIME IS BRAINTime window: stroke to needle 4.5 hrs

Suspectedstroke?

Within 3.5

hours?

Call 999: blue light patient into stroke unit

Page 18: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Time-windows for thrombolysis

• A limit (not a ‘target’)

• Anterior circulation strokes– 4.5 hours

Page 19: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Reason for time-limit

• For every 3 patients we thrombolyse, one will have a significantly less marked level of impairment.

but…..• One in 30 patients we thrombolyse, will be

harmed (including death) due to symptomatic bleeding (including intracranial).

Page 20: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

r-TPA in Newcastle upon Tyne

• In total 4 major bleeds – 2 deaths

PH 2

Page 21: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Time-windows for thrombolysis

• A limit (not a ‘target’)

• Anterior circulation strokes– 4.5 hours

• Anterior circulation strokes in very young people – 6 hours (intra-arterial thrombolysis)

Page 22: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Time-windows for thrombolysis

• A limit (not a ‘target’)• Anterior circulation strokes

– 4.5 hours

• Anterior circulation strokes in very young people – 6 hours (intra-arterial thrombolysis)

• Posterior circulation strokes– 12 hours (intra-arterial thrombolysis)

Page 23: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Fast track system: Newcastle

• All cases blue lighted by ambulance to Acute Medical Unit (AMU)

• Ambulance paramedics notify before setting off from patient’s home

• AMU SpR/Senior Nurse phones Stroke Consultant and Notifies CT scan personnel

Page 24: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Cases NOT for 999 referral

• Low likelihood of benefit from rTPA– poor pre-stroke functional level

– dementia, Nursing Home

– uncertain onset time (e.g. “woke up with stroke”)

– seizure

• High risk of bleeding complix from rTPA– surgery/major trauma within the last 2 weeks

– on warfarin, bleeding tendency

Page 25: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Common Stroke Mimics

• Seizure – Todd’s paralysis

• Cardiovascular collapse

• Migraine

• Labyrinthine disorders

• Infection- related delirium (“?dysphasia with no other focal neurological deficit”)

Page 26: GP Lecture Programme 3 February 2010 Dr Stephen Louw Stroke Physician RVI Newcastle upon Tyne

Improving stroke services in the North East

• Primary prevention– FATS 5 guidelines– Anticoagulation for AF– Hypertension

• Secondary prevention: Spotting TIAs

• Rapid referral of acute stroke

• Enhanced rehabilitation services