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“ЗАТВЕРДЖЕНО” на методичній нараді кафедри нервових хвороб, психіатрії та медичної психології “______” _______________ 2008 р. Протокол № _____ Зав. кафедри нервових хвороб, психіатрії та медичної психології професор В.М. Пашковський . METHODOLOGICAL INSTRUCTION № 16 THEME: SYNDROMES OF BLOOD CIRCULATION DISTURBANCES. ISCHEMIC STROKE Modul 2. Special neurology Сontents modul 3. Cerebrovascular diseases. Paroxysmal diseases. Cephalargy. Sleep disorders. Neurointoxications. Traumatic lesions of nervous system. Subject: Nervous deseases Year 4 Medical faculty Hours 2 Author of methodological instructions MD Filipets O.O. Chernivtsy 2008 1. Scientific and methodological substantiation of the theme. Diseases of the blood vessels are the most important neurological problem of adults in the world and especially in Ukraine. Stroke ranks first as the cause of death in the adult population in Ukraine and probably the first as the cause of chronic functional incapacity. According to the Report of the WHO in 1998 approximately 8 million people in the world dead from cancer, other 6 million – dead from infection diseases and about 14 million people died from strokes. 2. Aim: to study anatomy of cerebral and spinal blood circulation, circle of Willis, clinical characteristics and the main neurological signs of cerebral circulation impairments in carotid, vertebral and spinal arteries. To study etiology and pathogenesis of acute and chronic disturbances of cerebral circulation, clinical characteristics and main neurological signs of TIAs. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Students must know: Anatomy of cerebral and spinal blood circulation, circle of Willis. Examination program for patients with disturbances of cerebral circulation. Clinical characteristics and main vascular symptoms of the cerebral circulation impairments in carotid, vertebral and spinal arteries. Etiology and pathogenesis of ischemic strokes. Clinical classification of cerebrovascular diseases. Clinical characteristics and main vascular symptoms of the acute disturbances of the cerebral circulation. Clinical characteristics and main vascular symptoms of the acute disturbances of the spinal circulation. Examination program for these patients. 1. 2. 3. 4. Students should be able to: Examine the patient with acute and chronic disturbances of the cerebral circulation. Examine the patient with acute disturbances of the spinal circulation. Make a correct topical diagnosis. Make a correct clinical diagnosis. Student should gain practical skills: 1. To determine types of acute disorders of the cerebral circulation. 2. To determine Carotid or Vertebrobasilar vessels distribution 3. To determine pathological focus in acute phase 4. To find the reasons to cause disorders of cerebral circulation 5. To formulate the diagnosis 6. To administer emergency treatment of ischemic stroke 4. Integration (basic level). Subjects Anatomy Gained skills Knowledge of structure and blood supply of brain and spinal cord. Histology Hystological structure of brain cortex Physiology Pathologic physiology Knowledge of physiology of blood circulation and pathological mechanisms it’s dysfunction. Subject Because the nervous system is incapable of storing essential nutrients (oxygen, glucose) yet has one of the highest metabolic rates of any organ in the body, continuous circulation of blood is essential for the sustained health and proper functioning of neural tissue. The vascular system provides the anatomy for the circulation of blood. If circulation is interrupted for even short periods of time, individual structures and the systems within which they operate begin to exhibit signs of alteration in function. Prolonged occlusion of circulation results in disease and death to the affected tissue. This infarction is referred to as a stroke or cerebrovascular accident and is accompanied by specific neurological signs and symptoms that correspond to the functions controlled by the damaged area. Metabolism in the nervous system is aerobic or oxidative, and therefore requires a constant supply of oxygen. Although the brain constitutes only 2 percent of body weight, it receives 15 percent of cardiac output and uses 20 percent of the oxygen consumed by the body at rest. Metabolic needs, both the delivery of nutrients and removal of by-products, are met by the cerebrovascular system. Anatomy of Cerebral Arteries The cerebral arterial system consists of carotid and vertebrobasilar divisions, both of which emanate from the aortic arch. The carotid system supplies arterial blood to the vast majority of the cerebral hemispheres. It is derived from the left and right internal carotid arteries, with each cerebral hemisphere being supplied by the ipsilateral internal carotid artery. Both internal carotid arteries enter the ventral surface of the brain immediately adjacent to the optic chiasm. After passing through the carotid canal located in the petrous portion of the temporal bone, each internal carotid artery bifurcates into anterior and middle cerebral arteries. The anterior cerebral artery branches profusely through the medial longitudinal fissure and supplies the inferior surface of the frontal lobe and medial aspect of the frontal and parietal lobes, as well as the anterior corpus callosum. Smaller penetrating branches supply the deeper cerebrum, diencephalon, limbic structures, head of the caudate nucleus, and anterior limb of the internal capsule. The middle cerebral artery ascends through the lateral fissure and supplies blood to almost the entire lateral surface of the hemisphere, including motor, sensory, auditory, association, and speech areas of the frontal, parietal, occipital, and temporal lobes as well as the insula. Important penetrating branches of the middle cerebral artery, the lenticulostriate arteries, supply the putamen, outer globus pallidus, body of the caudate nucleus, and posterior limb of the internal capsule. The vertebrobasilar system supplies the brain stem and inferior surface of the temporal and occipital lobes. Each vertebral artery arises from a subclavian artery, enters the cranium through the foramen magnum, and gives off two branches. The first descends and forms the anterior spinal artery while the second forms the posterior inferior cerebellar artery. The vertebral arteries ascend along the anterior surface of the medulla to the junction of the medulla and pons, where they join to form the basilar artery. The basilar artery ascends along the anterior surface of the pons, giving rise to the anterior inferior cerebellar arteries, inferior auditory arteries, and superior cerebellar arteries as it ascends. At the top of the pons, the basilar artery bifurcates, giving rise to the posterior cerebral arteries, which supply the inferior surface с the temporal lobes, inferior and medial surfaces of the occipital lobes, and posterior corpus callosum. Smaller penetrating branches of the posterior cerebral arteries supply parts of the thalamus, subthalamic nuclei, and midbrain. The choroidal arteries arise from both the carotid and vertebrobasilar systems. The anterior choroid artery arises from the middle cerebral artery and supplies the choroid plexus of the lateral ventricles hippocampus, and parts of the globus pallidus a posterior limb of the internal capsule. The posterior choroidal artery arises from the posterior cerebral artery and supplies the choroid plexus of the ventricle and dorsal surface of the thalamus. Throughout the cerebral arterial system, pressure equalized by a series of anastomoses (communication between two vessels). The circle of Willis is probably the largest and best-known anastomosis in the brain. It plays an important part in equalizing the pressure and distributing the blood from the carotid and vertebrobasilar systems. The anterior сommunicating artery connects the left and right anterior cerebral arteries, and the posterior communicating artery connects the middle and posterior cerebral arteries in each hemisphere. Middle Cerebral Artery Syndrome The middle cerebral artery is the most common site of cerebrovascular accident. If the stroke occurs close to the vessel's origin, the symptoms are severe and very disabling. Middle cerebral artery syndrome includes a contralateral weakness (hemiplegia), hemisensory deficit, homonymous hemianopia, and, depending on the hemisphere involved, either aphasia if the dominant hemisphere is involved or impaired spatial perception if the nondominant hemisphere is involved. Muscle tone is usually decreased at first (hypotonia or flaccidity) but gradually increases over days or weeks to spasticity with increased deep tendon reflexes. Sensory deficits are most severe for proprioceptive and discriminative modalities. Impairments include two-point discrimination, the ability to recognize objects by their sensory qualities (stereognosis), and perception of a touch stimulus if another is presented simultaneously to the uninvolved extremity (extinction). The arm and particularly the hand are usually involved more than the leg, but not in every case. When the deep penetrating vessels supplying the internal capsule are involved, the face, hand, and foot are afflicted equally. Destruction of lateral corticospinal tract fibers accounts for the prominent involvement of the hand, while the loss of corticobulbar fibers projecting to cranial nerves accounts for facial involvement. The involvement of upper motor neurons is reflected in a positive Babinski sign, which is usually present from the onset. Depending on the hemisphere involved, the syndrome includes either disturbance of language or impaired spatial perception. Lesion of the left opercular (perisylvian) cortex produces aphasia. Lesion of the frontal opercular region (Broca's area) produces difficulty with speech production and writing while preserving speech comprehension (productive aphasia). Lesion of the posterior superior temporal gyrus (Wernicke's area, 22) produces difficulty with speech comprehension and reading (receptive aphasia). Extensive opercular damage may produce a particularly disabling global aphasia (a combination of productive and receptive aphasia). Lesion of the right middle cerebral artery produces difficulties with spatial perception, including copying simple diagrams (constructional apraxia) and dressing (dressing apraxia). Apraxia is difficulty in performing learned movements in the absence of loss of power, sensation, or coordination. Clients may fail to recognize their hemiplegia (anosognosia), the left side of their body (hemineglect), or any external object left of their own midline (hemi-inattention). Anterior Cerebral Artery Syndrome Lesion of the anterior cerebral artery causes hemiparesis and sensory deficits in the contralateral lower extremity. Effects are similar to those found following lesion of the middle cerebral artery but restricted to the lower extremity due to the somatotopic organization of the cerebral cortex. Bilateral lesion of the anterior cerebral artery may also produce profound changes in personality, including apathy, akinesia, and muteness. Posterior Cerebral Artery Syndrome The symptoms associated with lesion of the posterior cerebral artery are contralateral homonymous hemianopia with or without a hemiparesis. Thalamic involvement may produce contralateral hemisensory disturbances including spontaneous pain and dysesthesia (thalamic pain syndrome). Involvement of the subthalamic nucleus may cause severe chorea in the proximal segments of the contralateral upper extremity (hemiballism). Bilateral lesion may cause cortical blindness and memory disorders. However, posterior cerebral artery syndrome is quite variable because of several anastomotic connections with the middle cerebral artery that vary between individuals. Lacunar Syndrome The smaller penetrating arteries that originate from the larger vessels are particularly susceptible to damage caused by hypertension. Because these vessels lack anastomotic interconnections, occlusion of individual vessels causes small (less than 1.5 cm in diameter) strokes (lacunes). A lacune in the internal capsule that affects only corticospinal fibers will cause pure contralateral hemiparesis with little or no sensory loss. A lacune in the ventral posterior nucleus of the thalamus produces a pure contralateral sensory loss with little or no motor, visual, language, or spatial disturbance. Most lacunes are asymptomatic; however, if bilateral and numerous, they may cause a characteristic syndrome (etat lacunaire), which includes progressive dementia, shuffling gait, and pseudobulbar palsy. Brain Stem Syndromes Most brain stem strokes follow occlusion of the vertebral or basilar arteries and the resulting symptoms and signs are variable; however, two classic syndromes exist. Lateral medullary (Wallenberg) syndrome results from lesion of large branches of the vertebral or basilar arteries supplying the lateral brain stem and cerebellum. Symptoms usually include loss of pain and temperature sensation on the ipsilateral face and contralateral body, ipsilateral limb ataxia, vertigo, nystagmus, and Horner's syndrome with ipsilateral ptosis, miosis, dilation of facial blood vessels, and facial anhidrosis (lack of sweating). Medial brain stem syndrome results from lesion of the penetrating branches of the basilar or vertebral arteries in the caudal pons. Symptoms usually include ipsilateral abducens palsy (medial deviation of the eye) and a contralateral hemiplegia. Venous Drainage of the Brain Veins of the brain have thin walls that contain no smooth muscle or valves. They cross the subarachnoid space to join the dural venous sinus system. The venous drainage of the brain is divided into superficial and deep systems. The superficial system is located in the subarachnoid space and follows the contour of the hemispheres, with major vessels protected inside the medial longitudinal and lateral fissures. The superior sagittal sinus follows the medial longitudinal fissure and drains blood from the cortex and superior white matter located near the midline. It empties directly into the transverse sinuses. The superficial middle cerebral vein follows the lateral fissure and drains blood from the superficial region of the lateral aspect of the hemisphere. It empties into the transverse sinus via the inferior anastomotic vein. The superior sagittal sinus and superficial middle cerebral veins are connected by anastomotic veins running between the two. The deep venous system drains blood from the deep white matter and nuclei of the brain. The internal cerebral vein drains the deep parts of its hemisphere originating as the thalamostriate and choroid veins. Numerous smaller veins join to form the internal cerebral vein as it courses below the corpus callosum and empties into the straight sinus via the great cerebral vein. The basal vein drains the inferior and medial aspects of its hemisphere. It originates as the anterior cerebral vein, which accompanies the anterior cerebral artery. It is then joined by the deep middle cerebral vein and several smaller veins as it courses posteriorly and empties into the straight sinus via the great ventral vein. The inferior sagittal sinus drains the medial aspect of the cerebral hemispheres superior to the internal cerebral vein and empties into the transverse sinuses by way of the straight sinus. The transverse sinuses are continuous with the sigmoid sinuses, which return the blood to general circulation by way of the jugular veins. The cavernous sinus drains blood from the region of the hypothalamus and empties into the sigmoid sinuses and jugular veins via the superior and inferior petrosal sinuses. Arterial Supply to the Spinal Cord In the spinal cord, arterial blood is supplied by one anterior and two posterior arteries, which extend the length of the spinal cord. The anterior spinal artery is located in the anterior medial fissure. It arises from a small descending branch of each vertebral artery that unites and descends along the ventral surface of the pons, medulla, and cervical spinal cord. In the thoracic, lumbar, and sacral regions, blood is supplied by a series of radicular arteries (root-like beginning of arteries) that arise outside the central nervous system. The junction between spinal and radicular arteries creates two zones (upper thoracic and lumbar levels) where the spinal cord is most susceptible to ischemia (local and temporary reduction in blood flow due to obstruction of circulation). Caudally, the anterior spinal artery also serves the cauda equina. At each segmental level, sulcal branches from the anterior spinal artery penetrate and supply the anterior two thirds of the spinal cord, including the lateral horns, anterior horns, and anterior funiculi, bilaterally. The posterior spinal arteries are paired structures. Each arises from a small branch of the ipsilateral vertebral artery and extends the length of the spinal cord adjacent to the posterior lateral sulcus. A series of posterior radicular arteries contribute to posterior spinal arteries in the thoracic, lumbar, and sacral regions. The posterior spinal arteries distribute blood to the posterior one third of the spinal cord, including the posterior horns and posterior funiculi, bilaterally. Venous Drainage of the Spinal Cord The venous drainage of the spinal cord has a distribution similar to that of the arterial supply. Like the arterial system, a variable number of anterior and posterior radicular veins form the basis of the system. The anterior radicular veins form a distinct anterior medial vein and paired anterolateral trunks that extend the length of the spinal cord. The posterior radicular veins form a posterior medial vein as well as smaller, paired posterolateral trunks that extend the length of the spinal cord. As with the arteries, a meningeal plexus of veins connects the longitudinal trunks. From the anterior spinal vein, sulcal branches pass through the anterior medial fissure, where they drain blood from the lateral horns, anterior horns, and anterior funiculi, bilaterally. Sulcal branches from the posterior radicular veins also drain the posterior horns and posterior funiculi, bilaterally. Vascular Supply and Clinical Aspects of Peripheral Nerves The arterial blood supply to peripheral nerves is derived from rich anastomotic plexuses of small penetrating arterioles that originate from peripheral arteries of the body. Small branches from peripheral arteries penetrate the protective covering of the nerve and project longitudinally inside of the nerve. Different regional arteries form anastomotic chains within the peripheral nerve that extend the length of the nerve. Because of the rich anastomosis derived from several different sources, ischemic vascular disease of peripheral nerves is rare. When it occurs, such disease is usually due to direct compression of a nerve. Etiology and Pathology Ischemia and infarction. When blood supply is interrupted for 30 seconds, brain metabolism is altered. After 1 minute, neuronal function may cease. After 5 minutes, anoxia initiated a chain of events that may culminate in cerebral infarction; however, if blood is restored quickly enough, the damage may be permanent. Whether a permanent vascular lesion actually causes symptoms and signs depends on its location and the collateral arteries with which a person is born or that develop over time to circumvent it. Their adequacy depends on many factors, especially the rate of development of the obstruction. The reasons and risk factors. There are many risk factors that cause development of cerebral circulation disturbances . They are: physiological, behavioral and environmental factors . All of those increase risk of cerebrovascular diseases of nervous system. The risk factors are not the reasons of disease, but they show a connection with etiological reasons of the disease. The most common causes of ischemia: 1. Clinical evidence of atherosclerosis - it is the reason in 75 % of all cases of acute neurologic deficit as a result of disturbances of cerebral circulation (arterial occlusion). 2. Hypertension - the frequency of arterial hypertension is about 72%. 3. Combination of atherosclerosis and hypertension. Except these main reasons it is necessary to mention others which can reduce cerebral circulation: 1. Symptomatic (renovascular) arterial hypertension (for example, renal diseases); 2. Diseases of heart (inherent and congenital heart valvular defects, cardiac arrhythmias, rheumatic heart disease, atrial fibrillation, mural thrombus after myocardial infarction, bacterial and marantic endocarditis, atrial myxoma, cardiosclerosis, angina pectoris, cardiac insufficiency, ischemic heart disease and etc); 3. Infectional and infectionial-alergic diseases of vessels (rheumatic disease, syphilis, tuberculosis, systemic diseases, fibromuscular dysplasia, poliarteritis nodosa etc) by drain occlusion of the veins; 4. Systemic hypotension; 5. Vasomotor dystonia; 6. Diseases of blood (polycythemia, leukemia, hemophilia ets) - by contituents of the blood that are too viscous to be propelled through the system. 7. Renal diseases. 8. Diseases of endocrine glands (pancreas); 9. Diabetes mellitus; 10. Extero- and endogenic toxic defeat (renal and hepar insufficiency, alcohol toxemia, early toxemia of pregnancy); 11. Traumatic vessels defect (subdural hemorrhage, epidural hemorrhage, parenchymatous hemorrhage, ventricular hemorrhage); 12. Compression of vessels (for example, by arthritis of the cervical spine); 13. Anomaly (inherent and congenital) of Villis circle (stenosis and occlusion of magistral cerebral and neck artery, congenital defects of cerebral vessels such as aneurysm, closed loop, stenosis); 14. Tumors cerebri. 15. Cerebral arterial spasm is a debated cause of ischemia, but is incriminated in migraine and may be a major complication of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Pathology. The following steps occur in the evolution of an infarct: 1. local vasodilatation 2. stasis of the blood column with segmentation of the red cells are followed by 3. edema 4. necrosis of brain tissue. Although most infarct are pale, a "red infarct" is occasionally caused by local hemorrhage into the necrotic tissue. Grey matter tends to have petechial hemorrhages and white matter tends to have pale (ischemic) infarction. Hemorrhagic infarct probably occurs when the occluding clot or embolus breaks up and migrates, restoring flow through the infarcted area. If the interruption is sufficiently prolonged and infarction results, the brain tissue first softens, then liquefies; a cavity finally forms when the debris is removed by the phagocytic microglia. In attempts to fill the defect, astroglia in the surrounding brain proliferate and invade die softened area, and new capillaries are formed. If the area is large, the cavity may collapse or become the site for the formation of small multilacular cysts that are filled with clear fluid. Many patients have multiple infarctions. Small cysts infarcts, or lacunas, are the most common form of infarction. They usually occur in the basal ganglia, internal capsule, and basis pontis, and less commonly in the centrum semiovale or cerebellum. Lacunas result from occlusions of perforating arteries damaged by longstanding hypertension or diabetes mellitus. Embolism. Cerebral embolism is the term used to describe occlusion of an artery by a fragment of clotted blood, neoplasm, fat, air, or other foreign substance. The course of the disorder is similar to that described for infarction, except that an element of vasospasm may be superimposed. Most emboli are sterile; but some may contain bacteria if emboli arise secondary to subacute or acute bacterial endocarditis or if there is a lung infection. Infected emboli may result in arteritis with or without mycotic aneurysm formation, brain abscess, localized encephalitis or meningitis. Air embolism usually follows injuries or surgical procedures involving the lungs, the dural sinuses, or jugular veins. It !may also occur as a result of the release of nitrogen bubbles into the general circulation following a rapid reduction in barometric pressure. Fat embolism is rare and almost always arises from a bone fracture. In children, cerebral emboli are commonly associated with valvular heart disease (rheumatic or congenital) and superimposed endocarditis. In adults, atrial fibrillation or myocardial infarction is the usual cause. Thrombi in the left atrium may dislodge during fibrillation or after cardio version has restored more forcefulaid rhythmic contractions. After myocardial infarction, a portion of the clot that forms on the necrotic endocardium may cause transient ischemic attack (TIAs) or stroke, depending on the rapidity with which blood flow is reconstituted. Recurrent emboli in the lungs may cause pulmonary hypertension with a resultant inversion of the pressure gradient across the foramen ovale. As a consequence, subsequent emboli may traverse the foramen to the left side of the heart and then to the brain - a "paradoxical" embolus. Other rare causes of cerebral embolism are atrial myxoma, marantic endocarditis, and prolapse of the mitral valve. The most common sings of emboli are TIAs, which result from micro embolisms arising from atherosclerotic plaques on the aortic-cranial arteries. These plaques form nodes for clots, which may break off or ulcerate, discharging their contents of cholesterol and calcium into the bloodstream. The arterial bed in which, the embolus lodges constricts and may go into spasm. Tissue becomes ischemic, resulting in infarction unless the embolus fragments and migrates further. If the embolus lyses, blood flow is restored and a hemorrhagic infarction may follow. Except when an embolus contains bacteria, the pathologic changes in the brain are the same as those of infarcts due to atherothrombosis. Cerebral emboli are often multiple and are often associated with emboli in arteries in other parts of the body. Clinical considerations. The frequency of symptomatic cerebrovascular disease depends in part of age, sex, and geographic location and whether the data were gathered clinically, by CT, or at autopsy. It is therefore misleading to be too specific about the incidence of the several forms. In the prospective Framingham study of 35 000 people, 59 % of strokes were due to atherothrombosis, 15 % to hemorrhage, and 14 % to embolism. TIAs accounted for 0.9 % of strokes and other causes accounted for 3 %. Although cerebrovascular disorders may occur at any age, at any time, in either sex, and in all races, each of these factors affects the incidence and prevalence of the various types of cerebrovascular disease. Except for embolic causes, stroke is uncommon before the age of 40. The incidence of cerebral infarction is greatest between ages 60 and 80. Cerebral hemorrhage occurs most frequently among people between the ages of 40 and 60. The incidence of cerebral embolism and primary subarachnoid hemorrhage is more evenly spread, but is highest in the fifth and sixth decades of life. Cerebral infarction is not accidental occurrence, as the common but poorly chosen term "cerebral vascular accident" implies; rather it is the end result of a chain of events set in motion decades before the stroke. Epidemiologic investigations are now identifying susceptible persons and the factors that predispose those persons to disturbances of cerebral circulation. Known components of the stroke-phone profile are contained in the following list: Age Sex Race Cigarette smoking Alcohol abuse Hyperlipidemia (elevated blood lipids) - abnormal cholesterol (below age 50) - beta lipoprotein and possibly endogenous triglyceride and pre-beta lipoprotein Hyperglycemia (evidence of impaired glucose utilization) Hypertension Erytrocytosis (high hematocrit) Hyperurecemia (gout) Personality type Chronic stress Transient ischemic attacks or previous cerebral infarction Cardiac abnormalities - electrocardiography abnormalities indicating leit ventricular hypertrophy - myocardial infarction - cardiac dysrhythmias - particularly atrial fibrillation - X-ray evidence of cardiac enlargement - particularly if accompanied by EKG evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy - Congestive heart failure Clinical evidence of atherosclerosis - angina pectoris - intermittent claudicating of legs - arterial bruits Combination of three or more factors increases risk of development of acute neurological deficit. Premonitory and initial symptoms. Although the several types of cerebrovascular disease differ slightly in mode of onset, symptoms, and clinical course, clinical data alone often fail to identify its cause in an individual patient. Therefore, the symptoms of the various causes of stroke shall be discussed together. Patient with cerebrovascular disease are usually asymptomatic until the disorder reaches an advanced stage. Premonitory symptoms are infrequent. When they occur, they may be so nonspecific that they are not recognized as sings of an impending stroke. Headache, dizziness, drowsiness, and confusion may be present for minutes or hours before the ictus. The transient ischemic attack (TIA) is an acute neurological deficit that clears completely. As the name indicates, transient ischemic attacks are thought to result from ischemia too brief to cause infarction. TIAs and infarction are caused by the same mechanisms as embolism or thrombus, and the syndromes are essentially the same except for duration. TIAs have been defined as syndromes that last less than 24 hours. There are two types of TIA. In one type, the TIA usually lasts about 10 minutes and never lasts more than an hour. These attacks show a low frequency of intracranial arterial branch occlusions attributable to embolism, and a high frequency (about 50 %) of severe stenosis or occlusion of major arteries. The other type of TIA lasts longer than an hour and is ttore often associated with angiographically demonstrable intracranial embolism. These attacks have a low frequency of severe stenosis or occlusion of major arteries. They represent part of the spectrum of symptomatically short-lived ischemic strokes. A TIA is important to recognize because it may be a warning that a more catastrophic and permanent neurological deficit is imminent. In some instances treatment is available that will help to prevent the impending stroke. Between onehalf to two-thirds of people with thrombotic strokes give a history of a previous TIA, and at least 20 % to 30 % of patients with TIAs will go on to have a stroke. The symptom complex TIA represents a variety of pathophysiologic processes, some better understood than others. The following points should be established in the patient with a TIA. Although both types of TIAs imply increased risk of stroke, it is mainly the brief attacks that are associated with atherosclerotic occlusive disease, which is a surgically correctable arterial disease. TIA may occur in carotid or vertebrobasilar territory. The differential points between these two types of TIAs are: TIAs in carotid distribution. Two types of TIA syndromes occur in carotid artery region: 1. Transient monocular blindness (TMB) in the eye on the same side as a narrowed internal carotid artery (amaurosis fugax). Patient may report a "shade coming down" over his eye. In over 95 % of cases, it develops within Seconds as a sudden painless darkness or blurring that affects vision uniformly or from above downward in window-shade fashion. Vision is restored after a few minutes, like the clearing of atmospheric fog. Variants of TMB are rare enough to question whether they are really sings of arterial stenosis. In cases where repeated TMBs occur, the clinical syndrome is almost always the same. 2. transient hemisphere attack (THA), which affects the region of the middle cerebral artery: - Combinations of focal motor and sensory deficits occur, most often involving the fingers, hand, or forearm (a clumsy "bear's paw" hand), and some-times distorting language (transient aphasia) or behavior. The syndrome begins suddenly, is usually maximal at the moment of onset, and subsides slowly in several minutes. - no focal symptoms such as headache, lightheadedness, dizziness, forgetfulness, seizures, or behavior are not correctly diagnosed as carotid territory TIAs. TMB and THA almost never occur simultaneously, and only occasionally occur at separate times in the same patient; when TIAs are multiple, the clinical symptoms usually remain of the same type in the same patient. Severe ipsilateral internal carotid stenosis or occlusion is present in 50 % of patient with either TMB or THA that last less than an hour. The frequency is slightly higher if both types of TIAs occur in the same patient. TMB rarely lasts longer than 10 minutes. THA may last hours. When it does, it is more likely to be due to an embolus than to significant extracranial carotid stenosis. In vertebrobasilar TIAs, the variety of symptoms is too large to list, but the most diagnostically reliable are: - diplopia (double vision) - circumoral numbness (around lips or face) - dysarthria (slurred speech) - ataxia Dizziness, syncope, hemiparesis and hemisensory syndromes may effect one or both sides, loss do not parallel each other in the individual limb as in carotid disease. These symptoms are more difficult to classify as vertebrobasilar in origin when they occur alone. TIAs in carotid territory may be associated with stenosis or ulcerative plaques at the carotid bifurcation in the neck. When the patient has carotid symptoms, especially in association with a carotid bruit and/or decreased carotid pulse, arteriography is usually performed to define the vascular anatomy and to determine if he is a candidate for carotid endarterectomy. Remember, the carotid must be at least 80 % to 90 Vo narrowed before the blood flow is, significantly decreased. If the TIA is caused by emboli from an ulcerated plaque, high-grade stenosis need not be present. There are patients who have an occluded internal carotid with no symptoms at all. Moreover, patients may have a carotid bruit. There may be an occlusion with a palpabre pulse or a decreased pulse in a well-functioning vessel. TIAs in the vertebrobasilar territory are not well understood. The vertebral arteries and their origins have a predilection for atheroma development, but it is not certain what role emboli play in the vertebrobasilar system, or even what hemodynamic factors may be important. Most serious vertebrobasilar disease is intracranial, where surgery is not feasible, and the benefit of operation on the vertebral arteries in the neck is not proved. In the subclavian steal syndrome the patient has a narrowed subclavian artery and the arm "steals" blood from the basilar artery via the vertebral artery. There may be a cervical bruit and difference in blood pressure between the arms. At times of arm exercise the patient may experience vertebrobasilar insufficiency. In contrast to other patients with TIAs, those with the subclavian steal syndrome rarely develop a stroke due to the steal though there may be coexistent serious disease in the carotid arteries. Vertigo alone is rarely a, symptom of vertebrobasilar insufficiency ullness other brainstem sings or symptoms are present. Occasionally a patient may have vertebrobasilar symptoms when he turns his head, there being secondary to mechanical factors in the cervical region which alter blood flow. Emboli from the heart are well-recognized causes of TIAs in both the carotid and vertebrobasilar systems (more common in the carotid) and are seen in rheumatic heart disease, atrial fibrillation, mural thrombus after myocardial infarction, bacterial and marantic endocarditis, atrial myxoma, and with prosthetic valves. (Don't confuse Stokes-Adams attacks with TIAs). Cardiac arrhythmias may be associated with TIAs via decreased cardiac output and may require Holter monitoring for identification. Hypotension may be associated with TIAs in a patient with compromised cerebral circulation. There is a smooth clinical continuum from transient ischemia to infarction. At one end is infarction, caused by a persisting arterial occlusion when collateral vessels fail to spare the endangered arterial region distal to the occlusion. At the other end is ischemia, which is caused by the same severe stenosis or occlusion but is either rapidly relieved or adequately collateralized. Some clinical improvement is the rule in almost all symptomatic arterial occlusions, but even when function returns to normal, the attack should not be regarded as a TIA if it lasts longer than 24 hours because there usually is an infarct due to embolism or thrombosis. If the ischemic attack lasts more than 24 hours it should be diagnosed as an ischemic stroke. The term reversible ischemic neurologic deficit (RIND) has been applied to syndromes that improve within 24 hours but leave some minor neurologic abnormality; these are also properly regarded as minor ischemic strokes. Differential diagnosis of TIAs. It is mainly the sudden less of onset and the focal sings that give these syndromes the popular term stroke, and help to distinguish cerebrovascular disease frcn other neurologic disorders. Hypertension, arteriosclerosis, or other evidence of vascular disease is commonly present, but only the disappearance of symptoms within minutes or hours permits the separation of TIA from stroke. In the acute state, considerations of differential diagnosis apply equally to TIA and stroke. Sudden onset also characterizes trauma, epilepsy, and migraine. Migraine is increasingly appreciated as a major source of difficulty in the diagnosis of TIA. Migraine may begin in middle age; the. aura alone, without headache, is commonly experienced by those who suffer from chronic migraine. When symptoms are visual and diagnosis of transient mononuclear blindness is considered, the differential diagnosis from migraine is the easiest: migraine typically produces a visual disorder that marches across the vision of both eyes as an advancing thin scintillating line that takes 5 to 15 minutes to pass out of vision. Subsequent unilateral pounding headache need not occur, but makes the diagnosis certain. It is difficult to diagnose migraine as a cause of symptoms of hemisphere dysfunction because the auras of classic migraine only rarely include motor, sensory, language, or behavior elements. TIA rarely marches from one limb to another like the visual disorder of migraine. Until the matter is clarified, a diagnosis of migraine should probably not be seriously considered as 1 an explanation for transient hemisphere attacks unless the patient is young, has repeated attacks, experiences classic visual migraine auras at other times, and has a pounding headache contralateral to the sensory or motor symptoms in the hours after the attack. Nevertheless, older people do experience migraine's phenomena, and there may not always be prominent headache symptoms. Keep in mind that focal seizures may produce transient neurologic symptoms (numbness, leg or arm weakness) which may persist for hours. Obtain an EEG if seizures are suspected. Some systemic factors are known to be associated with TIAs. Well-recognized ones are anemia, polycythemia, thrombocytosis, and hypoglycemia. Self assessment: Tests for self-assessment: 1. The deficit signs of anterior cerebral artery distribution. 2. The deficit signs of median cerebral artery distribution. 3. The deficit signs of posterior cerebral artery distribution. 4. The deficit signs of vertebrobasilar distribution. 5. Venous drainage of the Brain. 6. Venous drainage of the Spinal cord. 7. Clinical classification of cerebrovascular diseases. 8. Name the causes of ischemia? 9. Clinical differentiated signs between transient ischemic attack and ischemic occlusive stroke. 10.Name the pathogenesis of infarct. 11.Name the premonitory and initial symptoms of strokes. 12.What are the differentiated signs between transient ischemic attack and ischemic occlusive stroke? 13.What are the main signs of TIAs in carotid distribution? 14.What are the main signs of TIAs in vertebrobrobasilar distribution? Tests 1. What are the main causes of strokes a) atherosclerosis; b) hypertensive disease; c) atherosclerosis and hypertensive disease; d) age, sex and race; e) chronic stress. 2. What are the differentiated signs between transient ischemic attack and ischemic occlusive stroke a) Local neurological signs are absent; b) Local neurological signs may be present for minutes or hours before stroke; c) Local neurological signs may be present for minutes or hours but not more than 24 hours; d) TIA and ischemic stroke haven’t differentiated signs; e) If the local neurological signs are present – it is ischemic stroke; a) b) c) d) e) 3. The acute period of ischemic stroke lasts for: 1 day; 3-5 days; 10-15 days; 30-35 days; 2-3 months. Real-life situations: 1. Verbal production of the patient is deceleated, blocked and impaired. Where is the focus of the stroke 2. The patient has headache which spread all over the head, a loss of sensation ad strength of movements in the left extremities. Examination has revealed central hemiparesis in the left side. There is increased muscular tone and tendon reflexes and Babinski sign on the paralysed limb. Where is the focus of the stroke References: 1. Basic Neurology. Second Edition. John Gilroy, M.D. Pergamon press. McGraw Hill international editions, medical series. – 1990. 2. Clinical examinations in neurology /Mayo clinic and Mayo foundation. – 4th edition. – W.B.Saunders Company, Philadelphia, London, Toronto. – 1976. 3. McKeough, D.Michael. The coloring review of neuroscience /D.Michael McKeough/ 2nd ed. – 1995. 4. Neurology for the house officer. – 3th edition. – howard L.Weiner, MD and Lawrence P. Levitt, MD, - Williams&Wilkins. – Baltimore. – London. – 1980. 5. Neurology in lectures. Shkrobot S.I., Hara I.I. Ternopil. – 2008. 6. Van Allen’s Pictorial Manual of Neurologic Tests. – Robert L. Rodnitzky. -3th edition. – Year Book Medical Publishers, inc.Chicago London Boca Raton. - 1981.