Cerebrovascular Accident I. General Medical Background A. Definition
Cerebrovascular Accident I. General Medical Background A. Definition
Cerebrovascular Accident I. General Medical Background A. Definition
INFARCTION
BLEEDS
INTRACEREBRAL
HYPERTENSIVE
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
NON-HYPERTENSIVE
Putamonal
Lobar
Thalamic
Pontine
Cerebellar
Intraventricular
TYPES
1.
2.
3.
4.
1. Aneurysm
- blooming of the
vessel
2. AV malformation
3. HPN
1. Blood-Dyscrasia
2. Leukemia
3. Dengue
4. Amphetamine
5. Infection
OUTCOMES
Thrombotic
Embolic
Lacunar
Venous
F. Clinical Manifestation
BASED ON ETIOLOGY
Pathogenesis of Stroke
CRITERIA
THROMBOTIC
Incidence
40%
Mechanism
Atherosclerosis
Occlusion of a
large blood
vessel
Onset of
Gradual, slow
Progression
stepwise
Progression of
six-hrs to days
Scenario
(+) warning
signs
Commonly
occurs at night
Sites
Int. carotid art or
MCA
Clinical
Manifestation
SUB-ARACHNOID
HEMORRHAGE
Aphasia, Visual
Field Cuts,
TIA
RIND
Completed Stroke
EMBOLIC
30%
Cholesterol
Hematoma
materials
LACUNAR
20%
Similar to
thrombosis
Small
infarcts
Chronic
process,
Gradual
onset
HEMORRHAGIC
10%
HTN rupture of
penetrating
arterioles
Cortical small
vessels
Small
perforating
arterioles
Cortical
deficits,
Discrete &
Specific
Sites of lacunae,
Brainstem, Basal
Ganglia, Int.
Capsule
Increase ICP,
Subcortical Deficits
Abrupt
Sudden
Commonly
occurs in
settings of MI
Prognosis
Hemiparesis,
Hemisensory
Seizures,
Aphasia,
Neglect
Sever
impairment
Repeated
stroke in
same
vascular
territory
Subcortical
Deficits,
Pure Motor
Stroke, Pure
Sensory
Stroke
Excellent
85% with
good
recovery
more extensive,
Hemiplegia,
Hemisensory loss,
Visual Field
Defects
Poor initial
Mortality rate 5070%; if blood
reabsorbed mild
deficits
Nucleus ambiguous
sensation
Nystagmus
Ipsilateral Horners
syndrome
Dysphagia & Dysphonia
5. LACUNAR STROKE
Location: deep cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, thalamus and
pons
Result from: occlusion of single, small perforating arteries common &
Present with a variety of neurological and functional
deficits
SYNDROME
ANATOMICAL SITES
Pure motor stroke syndrome
Posterior limb internal capsule basis
pontis
Pure sensory stroke
Thalamus, thalamocortical projections
Sensory-motor stroke
Junction of internal capsule & thalamus
Dysarthria-Clumsy hand
Anterior limb internal capsule, pons
Ataxia hemiparesis
Coronoa radiata, internal capsule, pons,
hemiballismus
thalamus, subthalamic nucleus
SIGNS & SYMPTOMS
SENSATION
- Frequently impaired but rarely absent on the hemiplegic side.
Loss of sensation after stroke can have a significant effect on it
and skin protection and motor control.
MOTOR FUNCTION
Sequential Recovery Stage:
With hemiplegia, weakness and poor control of voluntary movement is present initially, associated
with reduced resting muscle tone.
As voluntary movement returns, nonfunctional mass flexion and extension of the limbs are first
noted. Synergy patterns or mass contraction of multiple muscle groups are seen.
Later movement patterns can be noted to be independent of synergy.
Alteration in Tone:
Flaccidity usually present immediately after the stroke and is generally
shortlived, lasting hours, days or weeks
Spasticity velocity dependent in resistance to muscle stretch that develops
after an upper motor neuron injury
emerges in about 90% of cases; tends to occur in predictable
muscle groups, commonly the antigravity muscles
Synergy patterns stereotyped primitive movement patterns associated with
the presence of spasticity, they may be elicited either reflexly, as associated functions or
as voluntary movement patterns
*strongest components
FLEXION
EXTENSION
Upper
Scapular retraction, elevation,
Shouler protraction, shoulder
Extremity shoulder abduction, external
adduction, internal rotation*,
rotation, elbow flexion*,
elbow extension, forearm
forearm supination, wrist &
pronation, wrist extension,
finger flexion
finger flexion
Lower
Hip flexion*, abduction and
Hip extension, adduction*,
Extremity external rotation, knee flexion,
internal rotation, knee
ankle dorsiflexion, inversion
extension, ankle plantarflexion,
and toe extension
inversion, toe flexion
Reflexes altered and vary according to the stage of recovery
initially, stroke results in hypotonia and areflexia during the middle
stages of recovery when spasticity & synergies are strong,
hyperreflexia emerges
stretch reflexes become hyperactive and patients typically
demonstrate clonus and the clasp-knife reflex
cutaneous reflex (+Babinski) may be present
primitive or tonic reflex patterns may appear in a readily
identifiable reaction consists of abnormal, automatic responses of
the form associated involved limb resulting from action occurring in
some other part of the body
Incoordination can result from cerebellar or basal ganglia involvement from
proprioceptive losses or from motor weakness
Bladder and Bowel dysfunction urinary and bowel incontinence is a frequent
consequence of stroke
Orofacial dysfunction
Dysphagia swallowing dysfunction recurring in 30%
Apraxia an inability to perform purposely movement although there is
no motor impairment
problem exists in performing previously learned movements,
I. Prognosis
Depends on the following factors:
Extent of damage
Age
Health status
Location of affectation
Posterior circulation strokes are better than anterior circulation strokes
Posterior circulation strokes are catastrophic due to the life support
function of the affected part (brainstem)
Anterior circulation strokes are more extensive; has poor prognosis
but less complete
Motivation and psychological status of patient
Complications after onset
Presence of risk factors
Etiologic factor
Thrombotic severe impairment because infarction is extensive
Embolic can trigger repeat stroke in the same area; poor prognosis
Lacunar good prognosis because it involves small area
Hemorrhagic poorest prognosis; often fatal
II. Medical Management
Goals: minimize or avert ischemic brain infarction
prevent stroke recurrence
maximize functional recovery
A. Pharmalogical Treatment
Hyperosmolar agents to reduce edema due to severe ischemia and
hemorrhage (mannitol, glycerol)
Thrombolytic agents achieve recanalization of occluded cranial artery
(streptokinase, RTPA)
Hypoviscosity agents Dextran
Anti-HTN (Calcibloc, Diuretics, Beta Blockers)
Atnicoagulants (Heparin, Warfarin) 3-12 mos. following TIA. Contraindicated
in uncontrolled HTN, peptic ulcer disease, other bleeding disorder
Antiplatelet agents (ASA)
B. Surgical
Endarterectomy, CABG, clot removal only in cerebellar stroke, embolectomy
Control of risk factors: less salt in diet, stabilization of diabetes, cessation of smoking, control of
hypercholesterolemia
III. Physical Therapy Examination, Evaluation, & Diagnosis
A. Points of Emphasis in Examination
The physical examination of the patient includes a general medical examination as well as a
neurological examination. An investigation of vital signs (heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure)
and signs of cardiac decompensation is essential. The neurological examination stresses function of the
cerebral hemispheres, cerebellum, cranial nerves, eyes, and sensorimotor system. The presenting
symptoms will help to determine the location of the lesion, and comparison of both sides of the body will
reveal the side of the lesion. Bilateral signs are suggestive of brainstem lesions or massive cerebral
involvement.
B. Physical Therapy Diagnosis
1. Mental Status evaluation of the level of consciousness, immediate
recall, short and long term memory, orientation (to
person, place, and time), and ability to follow
instructions (one, two, and three levels)
2. Sensation should include superficial, proprioceptive, and
combined sensations
comparisons with the intact side should always be
done
3. Communication Ability should include receptive language (word
recognition, auditory comprehension, reading comprehension)
and/or expressive language function (word finding, fluency,
writing, spelling)
4. Perception should include body scheme, body scheme, spatial
relations, agnosia, and apraxia
5. Joint Mobility includes ROM and joint play
problems with spasticity may result in inconsistent
ROM findings
AROM tests may be invalid since synergy
dominance may influence performance
6. Motor Control evaluation of tone, reflexes (primitive, tonic), and
higher level reactions
voluntary movement patterns should be examined
for synergy dominance
total abnormalities (flaccidity or spasticity) are
assessed during both passive and active ROM
7. Gait Bobath assessment stressed qualitative control and balance
reactions
Brunnstrom assesses independence from synergies
based on a normal recovery sequence
Barthel index stresses functional independence and
endurance
8. Functional Assessment includes functional mobility skills (bed
mobility, movement transitions, transfers, locomotion, stairs)
basic ADL skills (home chores) should be assessed
BRUNNSTROMS STAGES OF RECOVERY OF MOVEMENT
U.E.
L.E.
Stage 1
The limbs feel heavy when
Flaccidity
moved passively.
Stage 2
Spasticity is developing but
Minimal voluntary movement
may not be very voluntary.
to the lower limb.
Stage 3
The basic limb synergies are
Hip-knee-ankle flexion in
performed voluntarily and the sitting and standing
flexors of wrist and digits are
likely to exhibit more
spasticity than their
antagonists.
Stage 4
Spasticity begins to decrease
Sitting, knee flexion beyond 90
and some movement
degrees with the foot sliding
combinations or basic limb
backwards on the floor;
synergies become available.
voluntary dorsifelxion of the
Placing the hand behind the
ankle without the lifting of the
body.
foot off the floor
Elevation of the arm to a
forward-horizontal position.
Pronation-supination elbow
extended.
Stage 5
Relative independence of the
Standing, isolated non-weight
basic limb synergies and
bearing knee flexion, hip
spasticity is warning.
extended or nearly extended;
Three (3) movements
standing is isolated
represents stage 5:
dorsiflexion of the ankle, knee
Arm raising to a sideextended heel forward in a
horizontal position
position of a short step
Arm forward and overhead
Pronation-supination elbow
extended
Stage 6
Movements are well
Standing, hip abduction
Stage 7
Unilateral Neglect
Many patients with non-dominant parietal lobe lesion have
neglect and ignore the opposite side of the body. Therapy is directed
at re-training, with repetitive exercises or use compensatory
techniques, to teach new methods of task completion. These
therapies include training patient to visually stand from side-to-side.
Depression
Many patients respond to drug therapy. Anti-depressants
improve depression.
Sexuality
Most patients require supportive psychotherapy to provide them
with better mechanism to cope with the sequelae of the stroke. Health
care professionals should be sensitive to the relationship issues and
be prepared to ask questions about intimacy, secual attitudes, needs
and behavior.
Psychosocial Aspects
The psychological, social and family aspects of stroke
rehabilitation are extremely important. The stroke patient fears loss of
independence, and the disabilities reduce self-esteem and self-worth.
All members of the rehab team should contribute to a positive and
supportive milieu to promote coping strategies on the part of the
patient and to assist the patient and family to prepare for discharge
and re-integration into the home and community.
Late Rehabilitation Issues
There are important issues that make post discharge
mandatory. From a medical perspective, the majority of patients with
ongoing medical problems requiring monitoring and therapeutic
intervention such as HTN, heart disease, diabetes, etc. A seizure
disorder develops in about 8% of stroke survivors, and this requires
conventional monitoring and treatment.
The rehabilitation program does not finish when the patient
leaves the hospital, and almost all patients benefit in continued
therapy. Specific problems may become prominent following
discharge include: depression, reduced sexuality, poor role adjustment
in the home and family, equipment needs in transportation and driving,
and secondary physical problems such as excessive spasticity in the
arm, RSD, changing pattern of ambulation. Dantrolene has been used
for many years of pharmacologic treatment of spasticity caused by
stroke. A small number of patients are bothered by spontaneous
spasms at night. These can be controlled by small doses of Diazepam
before bedtime.