Subarachnoid Hemorrhage
CODES
ICD9
- 430 Subarachnoid hemorrhage
- 437.3 Cerebral aneurysm, nonruptured
- 747.81 Anomalies of cerebrovascular system
ICD10
- I60.7 Nontraumatic subarachnoid hemorrhage from unspecified intracranial artery
- I67.1 Cerebral aneurysm, nonruptured
- Q28.3 Other malformations of cerebral vessels
CEREBRAL VASCULAR ACCIDENT
Veronique Au
•
Rebecca Smith-Coggins
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
Interruption of blood flow to a specific brain region:
- Neurologic findings are determined by specific area affected
- Onset may be sudden and complete, or stuttering and intermittent
- Responsible for 1 in 18 deaths in US
- 610,000 new strokes every year in US
RISK FACTORS
- Diabetes
- Smoking
- HTN
- Coronary artery disease, dysrhythmias
- Peripheral vascular disease
- Oral contraceptive use
- Polycythemia vera
- Sickle cell anemia
- Deficiencies of antithrombin III, protein C or S
ETIOLOGY
- May be ischemic (thrombotic, embolic, or secondary to dissection/hypoperfusion) or hemorrhagic
- Thrombotic stroke is caused by occlusion of blood vessels:
- Clot formation at an ulcerated atherosclerotic plaque is most common
- Sludging (sickle cell anemia, polycythemia vera, protein C deficiency)
- Embolic stroke is caused by acute blockage of a cerebral artery by a piece of foreign material from outside the brain, including:
- Cardiac mural thrombi associated with mitral stenosis, atrial fibrillation, cardiomyopathy, CHF, or MI
- Prosthetic or abnormal native valves
- Atherosclerotic plaques in the aortic arch or carotid arteries
- Atrial myxoma
- Ventricular aneurysms with thrombi
- Arterial dissection:
- Carotid artery dissection
- Arteritis (giant cell, Takayasu)
- Fibromuscular dysplasia
- Global ischemic or hypotensive stroke is caused by an overall decrease in systemic BP: Sepsis, hemorrhage, shock
- Hemorrhagic stroke:
- Intracranial hemorrhage
- Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Pediatric Considerations
- Usually attributable to an underlying disease process, such as sickle cell anemia, leukemia, infection, or a blood dyscrasia
- Younger children often present with seizures and/or altered mental status
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
- Time of onset (or time last seen at baseline)
- Trauma/surgery
- Medications
- Altered mentation/confusion
- Headache
- Vertigo/dizzy
- Focal neurologic deficits
Physical-Exam
- General:
- Cheyne–Stokes breathing, apnea
- HTN
- Cardiac dysrhythmias, murmurs
- Anterior cerebral artery:
- Contralateral hemiplegia (lower/upper)
- Hemisensory loss
- Apraxia
- Confusion
- Impaired judgment
- Middle cerebral artery:
- Contralateral hemiplegia (upper/lower)
- Hemisensory deficits
- Homonymous hemianopsia
- Dysphasia
- Dysarthria
- Agnosia
- Posterior cerebral artery:
- Cortical blindness in half the visual field
- Visual agnosia
- Altered mental status
- Impaired memory
- 3rd-nerve palsy
- Hemiballismus
- Vertebrobasilar system:
- Impaired vision, visual field defects, nystagmus, diplopia
- Vertigo, dizziness
- Crossed deficits: Ipsilateral cranial nerve deficits with contralateral motor and sensory deficits
- Basilar system:
- Quadriplegia
- Locked-in syndrome
- Coma
- Watershed area (boundary zone between anterior, middle, and posterior circulation):
- Cortical blindness
- Weakness of proximal upper and lower extremities with sparing of face, hands, and feet
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Detailed neurologic exam; consider calculating National Institutes of Health stroke scale (NIHSS).
- Emergent noncontrast head CT scan to distinguish ischemic from hemorrhagic events:
- May be normal in 1st 24–48 hr
- GOALS:
- CT completed within 25 min of arrival
- CT read by a radiologist within 45 min
- Thrombolytics administered within 1 hr of presentation
- If CT is normal and subarachnoid hemorrhage is suspected, emergent lumbar puncture is indicated
- EKG to evaluate for dysrhythmias or presence of MI
- Oxygen saturation measurement
- Rapid glucose determination
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Baseline CBC, electrolytes, renal function tests, liver function test, prothrombin time, partial thromboplastin time
- Urinalysis:
- Hematuria can be seen in subacute bacterial endocarditis with embolic stroke.
- Sedimentation rate:
- Elevated in subacute bacterial endocarditis, vasculitis, hyperviscosity syndromes
- Consider additional tests: Cardiac enzymes, urine pregnancy test, drug screen, alcohol level, ABG, and blood cultures.
Imaging
- Noncontrast head CT
- MRI can detect ischemia <2 hr after onset
- CXR
- Carotid US
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
- EKG to evaluate for arrhythmia
- Lumbar puncture if subarachnoid hemorrhage is suspected and head CT nondiagnostic
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Intracranial bleeding
- Hypoglycemia
- Seizure disorder; Todd paralysis
- Panic attacks, depression, conversion reaction
- Transient global amnesia
- Meningoencephalitis
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Intracranial abscess
- Migraine
- Air embolism
- Transient ischemic attack
- Encephalopathy
- Neoplasm
- Giant cell/Takayasu arteritis
- Multiple sclerosis
- Compressive myelopathy
- Vestibulitis
- Medication effect/toxidrome
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Patients may have difficulty moving or communicating after cerebral vascular accident
- Neurologic exam in field is helpful:
- Should include assessment of consciousness level, Glasgow coma scale score, gross motor deficits, speech abnormalities, gait disturbance, facial asymmetry, and other focal deficits
- Check fingerstick glucose
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Manage airway:
- Supplemental oxygen 2–4 L
- Rapid-sequence intubation may be required for airway protection or controlled ventilation to decrease intracranial pressure
- For altered mental status, give naloxone and thiamine and check blood glucose
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Treat elevated BP with labetalol, nicardipine, nitroprusside, or hydralazine:
- Systolic BP >220 mm Hg or diastolic BP >120 mm Hg on repeated measurements
- If indicated for other concurrent problems (MI, aortic dissection, CHF, hypertensive encephalopathy)
- Initial goal is systolic BP <180 mm Hg, diastolic <110 mm Hg
- Control seizures with benzodiazepines, then fosphenytoin/phenytoin
- Maintain euvolemia and normothermia.
- Thrombolytics:
- Ischemic stroke only; administer within 4.5 hr of symptom onset
- Contraindications:
- Any history of intracranial hemorrhage
- Recent stroke or head trauma <3 mo ago
- Major surgery <14 days ago
- Systolic BP >185 mm Hg; diastolic BP >110 mm Hg
- Bleeding diathesis
- Noncompressible arterial puncture <7 days ago
- MI <3 mo ago
- Anticoagulation: INR >1.7, PT >15 sec, or prolonged PTT; use of heparin within 48 hr
- Platelets <100,000
- Intracranial neoplasm
- Seizure at stroke onset
- Minor or rapidly improving symptoms
- Pregnancy
- Internal bleed (GI/GU) <3 wk ago
- Blood glucose <50
- Age <18 yr
- Avoid anticoagulants and antiplatelet drugs for 24 hr
- Treat increased intracranial pressure and cerebral edema:
- Elevate head of bed 30°
- Controlled ventilation to keep partial pressure of carbon dioxide 35–40 mm Hg
- Mannitol
- Urgent neurosurgical decompression may be required with brainstem compression in cases of vertebrobasilar stroke or hemorrhage.
- In patients with completed or minor strokes, aspirin may prevent recurrence.
- For focal embolic/thrombotic strokes:
- Recannulation
- US-enhanced thrombolysis
- Intra-arterial thrombolysis or clot retrieval