99
DURING A STROKE… YOU LOSE TWO MILLION BRAIN CELLS PER MINUTE! 2

2013.stroke areyouready

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

 

Citation preview

Page 1: 2013.stroke areyouready

DURING A STROKE…

YOU LOSE TWO MILLION BRAIN CELLS PER MINUTE!

2

Page 2: 2013.stroke areyouready

Stroke… Are You Ready?2013

2

Page 3: 2013.stroke areyouready

Saint Luke’s Neuroscience Institute

StrokeBrain Tumor

EpilepsyMinimally Invasive Spine

Movement DisorderRehabilitation Brain Fitness

2

Page 4: 2013.stroke areyouready

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mIkPjtcl2CI

2

Page 5: 2013.stroke areyouready

Regional Networking

Treats > 1000 people ischemic and hemorrhagic

stroke annually

Come by helicopter or ambulance from more than

80 regional hospitals

Acute Treatment Rate Over 30%

Page 6: 2013.stroke areyouready

SLNI Acute Stroke Intervention2002 – 2012 (preliminary-rev. 1/22/13)

8.9%5.9%

8.2% 7.4%9.4% 8.9% 9.8%

15.9%18.6% 18.9%

16.5%

3.8%

1.8%

2.9%1.6%

1.4% 1.5%2.6%

2.5%

2.0% 1.5%

0.6%9.5%

4.7%

5.1%

3.6%1.8% 2.7%

5.3%

2.8%

3.6%1.6%

0.4%

1.2%

2.3%

1.8%

1.3%3.4% 2.0%

3.2%

3.0%

4.7%4.7%

5.0%

1.8%

9.6%

10.1%

9.6% 7.0%6.0%

8.5%5.6%

7.3%7.2%

2.9%

0.0170.0176991150442478

0.019

0.0150.023598820058997

0.028

A/S+ A/AS ret + ret ia iv-ia iv

25% 24% 28% 23% 29%23% 21% 30% 39% 38% 30%

Page 7: 2013.stroke areyouready

Did you know?Stroke ranks 4th in cause of death in the U.S.

Leading cause of serious, long-term disability

$72 billion spent on stroke care per year

2

Page 8: 2013.stroke areyouready

Review of Cerebral Anatomy

2

Cerebrum – Frontal • Motor movement• Judgment• Emotion• Speech

– Expressive– Parietal

• Sensory• Speech

– Receptive – Temporal - hearing– Occipital – vision

Page 9: 2013.stroke areyouready

Speech Centers-Left Hemishpere

2

Broca’s Area

• Expressive Aphasia

Wernicke’s Area

• Receptive Aphasia

Page 10: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Review of Cerebral Anatomy Cerebellum - maintain balance and

further control of movement and coordination.

Page 11: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Review of Cerebral Anatomy• Brain Stem - automatic

functions, such as control of respiration, heart rate, and blood pressure, wake-fullness, arousal and attention.

LOC – most sensitive indicator of cortical function

Page 12: 2013.stroke areyouready

Homunculus

2

Page 13: 2013.stroke areyouready

Homunculus

2

Page 14: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Anterior Cerebral Artery Large Vessel

Page 15: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Middle Cerebral Artery – Large Vessel

Page 16: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Vertebral Arteries• originate from subclavian• ascend up spinal process

and form the Basilar artery

• Supplies spinal cord, brainstem, posterior lobes

Page 17: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Posterior Cerebral Artery

• Supplies the temporal and occipital lobes, cerebellum

Page 18: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Posterior Circulation

Bilateral cerebellar hemisphere infarcts.

Page 19: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Circle of Willis

• Sits at the base of the brain

• Joins the anterior and posterior circulation.

Page 20: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

What is a Stroke?

…a plumbing problem

Page 21: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Three Stroke Types

IschemicStroke

Clot occludingartery

Intracerebral Hemorrhage

Bleedinginto brain

Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

Bleeding around brain

Focal Brain Dysfunction

Diffuse Brain Dysfunction

Page 22: 2013.stroke areyouready

Right (Nondominant) Hemisphere Typical Signs: Left Side Weakness

Right Gaze Preference

Left Hemiparesis

Left Hemisensory

Loss

Left Hemi-inattention

(Neglect)Left Visual

Field Deficit

Due to pathology – if right hemisphere stroke (left muscles become paralyzed)– so only muscles working are the right.

2

Page 23: 2013.stroke areyouready

Left (Dominant) Hemisphere Typical Signs: Right Side Weakness and Aphasia

Aphasia

Left Gaze Preference

Right Hemiparesis

Right Hemisensory Loss

Right Visual Field Deficit

Hemiparesis: weakness or partial

paralysis

Hemiplegia: paralysis

Due to pathology – if left hemisphere stroke (right muscles become paralyzed)– so only muscles working are the left.

2

Page 24: 2013.stroke areyouready

• News reporter with aphasia

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xC2nC6NPYp4

2

Page 25: 2013.stroke areyouready

Cerebellum Typical Signs: Lack of Coordination

Ipsilateral (same side) Limb Ataxia (dyscoordination)

Truncal or GaitAtaxia (imbalance)Tremors, or Limb

Ataxia, result from lack of coordination of opposing muscle groups (flexors vs. extensors), causing the muscle groups to fight each other

2

Page 26: 2013.stroke areyouready

Brainstem Typical Signs: Cranial Nerve and Other Deficits

Oropharyngeal Weakness:

Dysarthria (speaking), Dysphagia (swallowing)

Eye Movement Abnormalities:

Diplopia

Dysconjugate Gaze

Gaze Palsy (horizontal gaze

deficit or gaze preference)

Decreased LOC

Nausea, Vomiting

Hiccups, Abnormal Respirations

Vertigo, Tinnitus

2

Page 27: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Face

Arm S T

Page 28: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

F

A Speech T

You can’t teach an old dog new tricks

AphasiaDysarthria

Page 29: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

F

A S Time

Page 30: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Last time known wellRouting planLocal-ready?

Bypass or not?This is CRUCIAL because time is the major determinant in what interventions may be effective—Time matters!“Time of onset” is often difficult to determine, so we default to the level of “time last known well”…Most of the TIME.

Page 31: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Last time known wellRouting planLocal-ready?

Bypass or not?TCD—Local or state?

Page 32: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Last time known wellRouting planLocal-ready?

Bypass or not?

Is your local facility stroke ready?

Page 33: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Last time known wellRouting planLocal-ready?

Bypass or not?

Page 34: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Door to Neurological Assessment….10 min

Door to CT….25 min

Door to CT/Lab interpretation….45 min

Door to Drug….60 min

The Golden Hour of Stroke Treatment

Page 35: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Saint Luke’s Stroke Treatment Options

IV tPA…….up to 3-4.5 hours

Intra-arterial tPA.......up to 6 hours

Mechanical clot retrieval.......up to 8 hours

Wake-up stroke treatment options available

Clipping or Coiling of ruptured aneurysms within 24 hours

Clinical Trials

Page 36: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Case Study #1

Page 37: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

82 femaleLeft-sided weaknessSlurred speechVision lossGaze deviationNeglect

PMH: atrial fibrillation, hyperlipidemia and hypertension

Page 38: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 39: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

NIHSS 9

Page 40: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Perfusion Cerebral Blood Volume Mean Transit Time

Page 41: 2013.stroke areyouready

Penumbra versus No Penumbra

Page 42: 2013.stroke areyouready

CT Perfusion 2/6, 2/7

MTTCBF

CBV

Perfusion Map And CTA

Page 43: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 44: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 45: 2013.stroke areyouready

• Int rounds/embolectomyhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?

v=1cVwqNePlew

2

Page 46: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Saint Luke’s Stroke Treatment Options

IV tPA…….up to 3-4.5 hours

Intra-arterial tPA.......up to 6 hours

Mechanical Clot retrieval.......up to 8 hours

Wake-up stroke treatment options available

Clipping or Coiling of ruptured aneurysms within 24 hours

Clinical Trials

Page 47: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 48: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

MRI Perfusion

NIHSS 3 at 24 hours post-interventionDischarged with home health

Page 49: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

“ We wanted my mom to go to her community hospital…….the EMS crew said we needed to go to Saint Luke’s for stroke care and we are so thankful we listened”

Page 50: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Case Study #2

Page 51: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

86 femaleSudden worst headache of her lifeDecreased LOC Visual disturbanceRight-sided weaknessAphasia

PMH: heart and lung disease and recently quit smoking

Page 52: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 53: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 54: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 55: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Saint Luke’s Stroke Treatment Options

IV tPA…….up to 3-4.5 hours

Intra-arterial tPA.......up to 6 hours

Mechanical Clot retrieval.......up to 8 hours

Wake-up stroke treatment options available

Clipping or Coiling of ruptured aneurysms within 24 hours

Clinical Trials

Page 56: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 57: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 58: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Page 59: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Repeat CT—5 days later

Page 60: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

DispositionIn-patient Rehab

Page 61: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Case Study #3

Page 62: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

74 y/o male EMS called at 0630 when wife found him Right hemiplegiaAphasiaLast known w/o stroke symptoms: 8pm the night before

PMH: renal disease, diabetes, htn, pacemaker & PVD

Page 63: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

NIHSS 23

Cerebral Angiogram: small clot in left MCA

Page 64: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Cerebral Arteriogram

Small clot in the left MCA

Page 65: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Saint Luke’s Stroke Treatment Options

IV tPA…….up to 3-4.5 hours

Intra-arterial tPA.......up to 6 hours

Mechanical Clot retrieval.......up to 8 hours

Wake-up stroke treatment options available

Clipping or Coiling of ruptured aneurysms within 24 hours

Clinical Trials

Page 66: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Cerebral Arteriogram

Successful intra-arterial thrombolysis of left MCA thrombus with restoration of

flow

Page 67: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Pt. experienced vtach during procedure and converted without meds

NIHSS 9 at 24 hours post-procedure

He remained in the ICU longer than normal due to complicated medical history, but recovered well from his

stroke

Page 68: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Case Study #479 y/o right-handed female

Sudden onset of right-sided weakness at 1030

EMS transported to local ED

Hx: Diabetes, CAD, Dyslipidemia, Stroke

Page 69: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

No acute CT findings

No exclusion criteria identified

Phone consult with Neurology at SLH

Collaborative decision made to start IV tPA and immediately transfer for possible further intervention

Page 70: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Saint Luke’s Stroke Treatment Options

IV tPA…….up to 3-4.5 hours

Intra-arterial tPA.......up to 6 hours

Mechanical Clot retrieval.......up to 8 hours

Wake-up stroke treatment options available

Clipping or Coiling of ruptured aneurysms within 24 hours

Clinical Trials

Page 71: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

NIHSS 3Improved following tPA CT Perfusion

No large vessel perfusion deficit

Page 72: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

CT HeadNo acute findings

Complete Resolution of Neurological Deficits

Discharged Home

Page 73: 2013.stroke areyouready

The Challenge Increase Access to IVtPA Safely

•Stroke treatment with IVtPA is time dependent•Patients will most likely present to the closest hospital•Earlier treatment is associated with better outcomes

•The presenting hospital may be able to administer IVtPA but cannot provide intensive monitoring during first 24 hours•The patient is transferred to a more comprehensive center

•Transfer protocols with IVtPA running are not standardized•Is it safe to “ship” the patient immediately after starting tPA?

2

Page 74: 2013.stroke areyouready

Is Immediate Transport Safe?• Retrospective review of consecutive “drip and

ship” cases 2008-2010.• Analysis– SICH or BP>180/105 on arrival– Inaccurate stroke diagnosis– Need for intra-arterial (IA) treatment– Mortality rate– Clinical outcome (mRS at 90 days)

• Location and Size of referring hospital

2

Page 75: 2013.stroke areyouready

Results

1626 ischemic strokes 717 (44%) were transferred

145 (20%) of transferred cases

were “drip and ship”

2

Page 76: 2013.stroke areyouready

63 Referring Hospitals

90% >10 miles63% >50 miles25% > 100 miles

2

29 Critical Access Hospitals of <25 beds

Page 77: 2013.stroke areyouready

Results

Mean Age - 67.5 years

Mean admission NIHSS score - 10.4

Mean discharge NIHSS score - 3

2

Page 78: 2013.stroke areyouready

Blood Pressure on Arrival

1 SICH

•BP=183/77•MortalityNo

hemorrhage

•BP=232/84•Mortality10

/14

•mRS 0-2 at 90 days

2

9.6% had BP >180/105

Page 79: 2013.stroke areyouready

Hemorrhage on Arrival

4 •4 (2.7%) cases had SICH on arrival•3 of these had BP <180/105

2 •2 mortalities related to SICH•1 mortality had BP>180/105

2 •Admit NIHSS 25; discharge NIHSS 4•Admit NIHSS 18; discharge NIHSS 10

2

Page 80: 2013.stroke areyouready

Outcomes

mRS 0-2 at 90 days = 72/114 (63%)Note: mRS scores not available for 2008

Mortality = 20/145 (13.7%) IA therapy = 35/145 (24%)Inaccurate diagnosis at sending facility = 6/145 (4.1%) ; all had excellent clinical outcomes.

2

Page 81: 2013.stroke areyouready

Gtt & Ship Data

• Immediate transport of patients with IV tPA infusing is safe with a low incidence of SICH en route

• >90% had BP <180/105 on arrival• The 63% good outcomes may, in part, relate to early

treatment with IV tPA in referring hospitals• Hospitals of every size and location can safely treat

stroke victims with IV tPA if they have access to consultation and transfer agreements with experienced stroke centers

2

Page 82: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Case Study #552-year-old female

Sudden onset of difficulty speaking

Resolved upon EMS arrival

Page 83: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

10 hours later...Incomprehensible speech

Right sided paralysis

Left gaze deviation

Page 84: 2013.stroke areyouready

What does a mulligan have in common with a TIA?

2

Page 85: 2013.stroke areyouready

TIA Statistics…

2

10% of all strokes are preceded by TIAs

1/3 of all persons who experience TIAs…will go on to have an actual stroke• 5% of those strokes will occur within ONE month• 50% within 48hours

Page 86: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Tia—martinhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1wx9fj-R-0s

Page 87: 2013.stroke areyouready

Mild StrokeNIH Stroke Scale: stroke severity scale (0-42)

<5 Mild impairment 10-20 Moderate impairment >20 Severe impairment

Predicted need for long-term nursing care <6 Most will return home 6-13 Most will need short-term hospital care >13 Most will need long-term nursing care

2

Page 88: 2013.stroke areyouready

Stroke Mimics

2

Page 89: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

Stroke Management Transport Protocols

Page 90: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

• Post IV tPA Treatment & Management• Document neuro assessment & blood pressure Q15min

• If change in neuro: STOP tPA, assess ABC’s & vitals & glucose

• Maintain BP<180/105 after administration and during transport

• Hypertension: Labetalol 10mg IV over 2min. Recheck in 5min; may repeat x1 (do not use if heart rate <60)

• Stop BP infusion if SBP<140 or DBP<80

• Hypotension: STOP tPA, HOB flat, turn off drips, 500ml fluid bolus(NS), reassess

• Start NS at 80ml/hr after infusion complete to clear line and continue if no hx of CHF

Page 91: 2013.stroke areyouready

Non-tPA treated patientsTarget BP—220/120

Follow blood pressure management protocol

2

Page 92: 2013.stroke areyouready

Hemorrhagic StrokeTarget BP < =160/90

Follow BP management protocol

2

Page 93: 2013.stroke areyouready

Follow-up

2

Page 94: 2013.stroke areyouready

2

MERCI Retriever “The Corkscrew”

Page 95: 2013.stroke areyouready

Outcomes for patients who received treatment with the Solitaire system during clinical trial:

• Brain artery opened 83% of the time in comparison to 48% with the Merci retriever catheter• Good clinical outcomes 58% of the time vs. 33% with Merci• 55% reduction in patient mortality at 3 months using Solitaire vs. Merci

Solitaire Device

Page 96: 2013.stroke areyouready

Types of Clots Retrieved

Page 97: 2013.stroke areyouready

Basilar Clot Basilar artery blocked

Page 98: 2013.stroke areyouready

Clots

Page 99: 2013.stroke areyouready

Discussion

2