Hemorrhagic stroke natural history
Hemorrhagic stroke Microchapters |
Diagnosis |
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Treatment |
AHA/ASA Guidelines for the Management of Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage (2015) |
AHA/ASA Guidelines for the Management of Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (2012) |
AHA/ASA Guideline Recommendation for the Primary Prevention of Stroke (2014) |
AHA/ASA Guideline Recommendations for Prevention of Stroke in Women (2014) Sex-Specific Risk Factors
Risk Factors Commoner in Women |
Case Studies |
Hemorrhagic stroke natural history On the Web |
American Roentgen Ray Society Images of Hemorrhagic stroke natural history |
Risk calculators and risk factors for Hemorrhagic stroke natural history |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Overview
Natural history
In Inracerebral hemorrhage|Inracerebral hemorrhage (ICH), underlying small vessel disease may result in acute vessel rupture. This acute vessel rupture can progress can result in brain injury by folllowing mechanisms:
- The mass effect from the hematoma itself
- Activation of the coagulation cascade and release of inflammatory cytokines, and blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption
All of these mechnisems can lead to perihematomal edema formation and secondary brain injury. Aditionally, continued bleeding, or hematoma expansion, occurs in many patients—either continued bleeding from the primary source or secondary bleeding at the periphery of the hemorrhage
Based on the anatomic location and size of the hemorrhage, hemorrhagic stroke may have a different outcome
- Large clot may form and compress adjacent tissue, and may result in herniation and death.
- Blood may also dissect into the ventricular space, which substantially increases morbidity and may cause hydrocephalus
Baseline NIHSS and Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) scores can be used to assess stroke severity, although the GCS score may be more feasible to follow for neurologic deterioration ( Box 101-3 ). In addition, serial examinations can detect early changes that may suggest ongoing bleeding during the acute phase.
(NIH) Stroke Scale Scoring
Item | Scoring Definitions |
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Level of consciousness (LOC) Responsiveness |
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LOC Questions (patient's age and month) |
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LOC Commands (open/close eyes and then grip/release hand) |
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Horizontal Eye Movement (voluntary or doll's eye maneuver) |
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Visual field (each eye is tested individually) |
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Facial palsy (in stuporous, check symmetry of grimace to pain) |
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Motor arm (arms outstretched for 10 seconds) |
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Motor leg (raise leg for 5 seconds) |
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Limb ataxia (check finger-nose-finger, heel-shin position sense/score only if out of proportion to paralysis) |
1 = ataxia in upper or lower extremity 2 = ataxia in upper and lower extremity X = unable to assess owing to amputation, fusion, fracture, and so on |
Sensory (check grimace or withdrawal if patient is stuporous) |
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Best language (describe the scenario in the figure, name objects, read sentences) |
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Dysarthria (read list of words) |
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Extinction or neglect (simultaneously touch patient on both hands/show fingers in both visual fields) |
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Prognosis
- Despite aggressive and newer management strategies, the prognosis of patients with intracerebral hemorrhage is very poor.
- Case-fatality at 1 month is over 40 % and has not improved in last few decades.[1]
References
- ↑ Apanasenko BG, Kunitsyn AI, Isaev GA, Khodyrev LP (1976). "[Determination of the weight of disemulsified lipid circulating in the blood as a method of diagnosis of fat embolism]". Lab Delo (1): 41–3. PMID 0056489.