Term
what is the survival rate for subarachnoid hemorrhage *from aneurysm? |
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Definition
50% - 25% of which will die later or be severely disabled by 8 wks |
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Term
what % of people have a "normal" circle of willis? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the common presentation of subarachnoid injury? |
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Definition
abrupt onset of the worst occipital-cervical headache that pt has ever experienced accompanied by n/v and photophobia. if very severe: comatose. |
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Term
how should a cerebrovascular injury pt be worked up? |
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Definition
first: non-contrast CT scan to look for blood. second, if blood is seen in an area consistent with aneurysm on CT or a spinal tap is done and see RBCs are visible: do anatomic diagnostic test (transcatheter angiogram, CT angiogram, CTA Reconstruction, or MRA/MRV) |
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Term
what needs to be done if a if a pt comes into the ER with a complaint of: sudden onset of severe headache with or without photophobia, with or without n/v, with or without meningeal signs, severe headache and negative CT? |
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Definition
spinal tap to r/o blood in the CSF, b/c mild hemorrhages may not show blood on CT. |
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Term
what characterizes MRA as a diagnostic test for cerebrovascular injury? |
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Definition
MRA = MR technology w/intravascular contrast to ID some blood vessels. it is non-invasive and easily available, but it can miss aneurysms under 5 mm. |
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Term
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Definition
an out-pouching from the arterial wall due to a separation in the muscular layer (medial gap) which allows arterial pressure to force outward stretching and formation of the aneurysm. |
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Term
what are the 4 kinds of cerebral aneurysms? |
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Definition
saccular (most common - berry), fusiform (atherosclerotic), mycotic (infectious - peripheral), and dissecting (rare - trauma) |
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Term
where are most aneurysms located? |
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Definition
saccular aneurysms are situated in anterior circulation 80% of the time: internal carotid, anterior cerebral/anterior communicating complex, and cerebellar artery - good because easily accessible. |
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Term
where does aneurysmal rupture hemorrhage into? |
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Definition
the parenchyma, ventricular system, occasionally subdural and in multiple combinations/locations (20% of the time). |
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Term
how does risk of aneurysmal rupture correlate w/size? |
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Definition
risk of aneurysmal rupture increases proportionately with size until get to giant aneurysm (25 mm or bigger). giant aneurysms then bleed less often than smaller aneurysms. |
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Term
what conditions are associated w/increased intracranial aneurysm risk? |
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Definition
marfan's syndrome, ehlers-danlos type IV, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, *polycystic kidney disease, and fibromuscular dysplasia |
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Term
what is the clinical presentation of intracranial aneurysm? |
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Definition
most pts present w/*subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) but some will present w/*cranial neuropathy (mass effect compresses cranial nerves/brain) such as 3rd nerve palsy (= eyelid ptosis, involves either superior cerebellar or posterior communicating artery). 3rd nerve palsy may also present in DM, but only w/muscular and not pupillary involvement (DM only affects the core of the nerve which goes to musculature, but an aneurysm will compress the periphery of the nerve which contains the autonomic pupillary control). intracranial aneurysm pts may also present w/*ischemic stroke (embolizes saccular thrombus distally - rare), *headache, as an *incidental finding on a brain imaging study, or *dead (25-50%) |
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Term
does clinical presentation of a intracranial aneurysm correlate w/dangerous levels of blood in the brain? |
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Definition
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Term
what accounts for 60% of spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH)? what is the overall most common cause of SAH? |
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Definition
aneurysmal rupture. other more rare causes: arteriovenous malformations and hypertensive hemorrhage. the *overall most common cause of SAH: head trauma. |
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Term
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Definition
abrupt onset of severe headache, unconsciousness, convulsion, vomiting, nuchal rigidity (kernigs/budzinski signs after a few hours), and grossly bloody CSF (60,000 up to 200,000 RBC per CC, several hrs later: xanthochromia, and the sheet sign: 1 WBC/1000 RBC or 1 mg protein per 1000 RBC) |
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Term
when is the incidence of re-bleeding highest after a SAH? |
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Definition
in the first 2 days and then over the next 14 days. 50% of pts will re-bleed by 6 months. |
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Term
what is the hunt-hess clinical grading scale for SAH? |
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Definition
grade 0: not ruptured. grade 1: asymptomatic or minimal h/a and slight nuchal rigidity. grade 2: moderate-severe h/a, nuchal rigidity, but no neurological deficit other than cranial nerve palsy. grade 3: drowsiness, confusion, or mild focal deficit (big break point). grade 4: stupor, moderate-severe hemiparesis, possible early decerebrate rigidity and vegetative disturbances. grade 5: deep coma, decerebrate rigidity, and moribund appearance. *an apparent grade 4/5 may only be a grade 2/3 w/a clot or hydrocephalus creating the mass effect rather than hemorrhaging blood. |
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Term
what is the fisher grading scale for SAH? |
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Definition
a mechanism to discuss the amount of blood seen on a CT scan. 1 - no blood, 2 - diffuse deposition of a thin layer of blood, 3 - localized clots, layer of blood 1 mm+, 4 - intracerebral/intraventricular clots. the higher the fisher grade, the higher the likelihood of vasospasm (very bad complication). |
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Term
what is unique about an MCA aneurysm rupture? |
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Definition
MCA aneurysm ruptures are associated w/blood in the parenchyma (temporal lobe) as well as in the subarachnoid space. |
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Term
what characterizes cavernous carotid aneurysms? |
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Definition
these tend to not rupture, but if they do, they do not produce a devastating SAH. instead, they rupture into the cavernous sinus which can create a fistula, orbital/retrooribital pain, and CN 3,4,6 paresis. these do not require tx. |
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Term
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Definition
take hx, stabilize pt, control BP (lower: safer from rupture but can have ischemia), pain meds if needed, control intracranial pressure if elevated, and decrease re-rupture (most effectively done via surgical clipping, but endovascular coiling to induce thrombosis at the site of aneurysm may also be performed). |
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Term
what does a brain look like grossly which has suffered a ruptured aneurysm? |
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Definition
swollen, friable and low toleration of surgical manipulation |
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Term
what is the rationale for waiting 2 wks to operate on SAH? |
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Definition
vasospasm occurs 4-7 days after SAH, after which the brain is more tolerable to surgery. aneurysms are also more fragile immediately after rupture and extra time allows scarring to take place. |
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Term
what is the problem w/waiting 2 wks to operate on SAH? |
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Definition
aneurysms can re-bleed, causing the pt to potentially go into a coma and die (re-bleeds are usually worse). vasospasms (rxn of vasculature to subarachnoid blood) may also occur, causing neurologic deficits. the tx for vasospasm is increased BP/volume, however this then increases the risk of another SAH. |
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Term
why is operating early (w/in 72 hrs) on SAH pts generally going to provide a better outcome? |
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Definition
this prevents rebleed and vasospasm can then be treated by increasing BP/volume w/less risk. this is however more difficult. |
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Term
what are the benefits of endovascular coiling? |
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Definition
less invasive, less hospital time, fewer complications from sx (will do better for the *first year). |
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Term
what are the disadvantages of endovascular coiling? |
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Definition
not always as complete as clipping, may require surgical rescue, difficult to operate on later, associated w/ballooning/stenting, and required annual transcatheter arteriogram. |
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Term
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Definition
an expensive Ca2+ blocking drug which is thought to reduce ischemia from aneurysmal vasospasm |
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Term
what is an arteriovascular malformation (AVM)? |
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Definition
a congenital abnormality where the capillary bed between the arteries and veins is lost |
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Term
what characterizes the risk of AVM? |
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Definition
1/7 incidence of aneurysm, no gender predilection, 70-90% are supratentorial, and most involve the MCA followed by the ACA and finally the PCA. |
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Term
what is the relationship between AVMs and aneurysms in terms of hemorrhage? |
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Definition
AVMs are more likely to hemorrhage than aneurysms, but when AVMs do hemorrhage, the consequences are less severe (tissue around AVM is already dead and can accommodate blood). |
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Term
how can AVMs lead to CHF in kids? |
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Definition
if enough arterial circulation is shunted back into the veins = heart is overloaded w/fluid |
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Term
how does an AVM present grossly on the brain surface? |
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Definition
as a dilated veins w/large contributing arteries |
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Term
what is the relationship between AVMs and aneurysms in terms of seizure? |
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Definition
AVMs are more commonly associated w/seizure |
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Term
what is the spetzler-martin grading scale? |
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Definition
an AVM grading scale (1-5) which determines surgical tolerability based on the size o the lesion, the eloquence of the tissue and if it drains superficially or deep. |
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Term
what are tx modalities for AVMs? |
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Definition
surgery (separates arterial inflow from venous drainage - however need to ensure that venous outflow is still sufficient), embolization, radiation, and combination approaches. |
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Term
if you can see the AVM, what is there still a risk of? |
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Definition
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Term
what are the s/s for AVMs? |
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Definition
h/a, seizures, hemorrhage, fluctuating neurologic deficits, all of which usually appearing before age 40. |
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Term
what characterizes cavernous angiomas? |
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Definition
these are seen fairly commonly w/MRI technology. they can cause headaches, but are generally of little concern unless hemosiderin deposits are seen around the base = bleeding has occurred. radiation is commonly used to remove these. |
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