Ischemic stroke

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Background

  • Acute ischemia of brain parenchyma due to arterial occlusion
  • Most common type of stroke (~87% of all strokes)
  • 5th leading cause of death in the US; leading cause of long-term disability
  • "Time is brain": ~1.9 million neurons lost per minute of untreated large vessel occlusion[1]
  • IV tPA window: up to 4.5 hours from last known well
  • Thrombectomy window: up to 24 hours in select patients with large vessel occlusion (LVO) and favorable imaging

Etiology

  • Large artery atherosclerosis (~25%): carotid stenosis, intracranial atherosclerosis
  • Cardioembolism (~25%): atrial fibrillation (most common), valvular disease, LV thrombus
  • Small vessel disease (lacunar, ~20%): lipohyalinosis of penetrating arteries (hypertension)
  • Other determined (~5%): dissection, hypercoagulable state, vasculitis, sickle cell
  • Cryptogenic/undetermined (~25%)

Clinical Features

  • Sudden onset focal neurologic deficit (maximal at onset or rapidly progressive)
  • Last known well (LKW) time is the most critical historical datapoint

Anterior Circulation (Carotid Territory)

  • MCA stroke (most common): contralateral face/arm > leg weakness, hemisensory loss, aphasia (dominant hemisphere) or neglect (nondominant), gaze deviation toward lesion
  • ACA stroke: contralateral leg > arm weakness, urinary incontinence, abulia
  • ICA occlusion: entire MCA territory ± ACA territory

Posterior Circulation (Vertebrobasilar)

  • PCA stroke: homonymous hemianopia, memory deficits, alexia without agraphia
  • Basilar occlusion (emergency): bilateral motor/sensory deficits, cranial nerve palsies, coma, locked-in syndrome
  • Cerebellar stroke: ataxia, vertigo, nystagmus, headache → can cause brainstem compression (surgical emergency)
  • HINTS exam to distinguish cerebellar/brainstem stroke from peripheral vertigo

Mimics (Important to Recognize)

  • Hypoglycemia (always check glucose), seizure with Todd paralysis, Bell palsy, migraine with aura, conversion disorder, intracranial mass

Differential Diagnosis

  • Hemorrhagic stroke (cannot distinguish clinically — MUST image)
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Postictal (Todd) paralysis
  • Complicated migraine
  • Bell palsy
  • Intracranial mass/abscess
  • Psychogenic/conversion
  • Drug toxicity

Evaluation

Critical First Steps

  • Blood glucose (POC STAT — hypoglycemia mimics stroke and must be corrected)
  • Non-contrast CT head (rule out hemorrhage — ONLY test required before tPA)
  • CT angiography (CTA) head and neck: identify large vessel occlusion (LVO) for thrombectomy candidacy
  • CT perfusion (CTP): ischemic penumbra assessment for extended-window cases

NIHSS Score

  • Standardized neurologic exam scoring (0-42)
  • Correlates with stroke severity and helps guide treatment decisions
  • NIHSS ≥6: consider LVO until proven otherwise; higher scores = worse prognosis
  • Use the NIHSS calculator for scoring

Additional Studies

  • ECG: atrial fibrillation, MI
  • CBC, BMP, coagulation studies (PT/INR, PTT)
  • Troponin (concurrent cardiac events)
  • A1c, lipid panel (risk factor assessment, not urgent)
  • Echocardiography (identify cardioembolic source)

Do NOT Delay tPA for:

  • Labs (except glucose)
  • CTA/CTP
  • Complete history
  • Only glucose and NCCT are needed before tPA

Management

IV Alteplase (tPA)

  • Indicated within 4.5 hours of last known well (LKW)[2]
  • Dose: 0.9 mg/kg IV (max 90 mg):
    • 10% as bolus over 1 minute
    • Remaining 90% infused over 60 minutes
  • Extended window (3-4.5 hours): additional exclusions apply (age >80, NIHSS >25, oral anticoagulant use, history of DM + prior stroke)
  • Key contraindications:
    • Active internal bleeding, recent intracranial surgery/trauma (3 months)
    • Intracranial hemorrhage on CT
    • SBP >185 or DBP >110 (lower BP first)
    • Platelets <100,000, INR >1.7, aPTT elevated
    • Blood glucose <50 mg/dL
  • Tenecteplase (0.25 mg/kg IV bolus, max 25 mg): emerging alternative, single-bolus dosing, favorable in LVO[3]

Endovascular Thrombectomy

  • Standard window: within 6 hours of LKW for anterior LVO
  • Extended window: up to 24 hours with favorable perfusion imaging (DAWN and DEFUSE 3 trials)[4]
  • Target vessels: ICA, M1, and sometimes M2 MCA, basilar artery
  • NNT = ~2.6 for reduced disability (one of the most effective treatments in medicine)
  • Thrombectomy is ADDITIVE to IV tPA — give tPA first, do not delay for thrombectomy

Blood Pressure Management

  • If tPA candidate: lower BP to <185/110 before tPA; maintain <180/105 for 24h after
  • If NOT receiving tPA: permissive hypertension up to 220/120 (avoid aggressive lowering)
  • Post-thrombectomy with successful recanalization: target SBP <140 (BP-TARGET trial)
  • Preferred agents: labetalol, nicardipine

General Management

  • NPO until swallow assessment (aspiration risk)
  • Aspirin 325 mg PO/PR within 24-48 hours (if no tPA in past 24h)
  • DVT prophylaxis (SCDs immediately; chemical prophylaxis after 24-48h)
  • Glucose management: target 140-180 mg/dL; treat hypoglycemia; avoid hyperglycemia
  • Avoid fever (antipyretics for temp >38°C)
  • Avoid hypotension (maintain adequate cerebral perfusion)

Disposition

  • All acute stroke patients: admit to stroke unit/neuro ICU
  • Transfer to comprehensive stroke center if LVO identified and thrombectomy capability unavailable
  • Do NOT delay tPA for transfer — give tPA at presenting hospital then transfer ("drip and ship")
  • Neurology and neurointerventional consultation
  • Start workup for stroke etiology (echo, prolonged cardiac monitoring, vascular imaging)

See Also

References

  1. Saver JL. Time is brain — quantified. Stroke. 2006;37(1):263-266. PMID 16339467
  2. Powers WJ, et al. Guidelines for the early management of patients with acute ischemic stroke: 2019 update to the 2018 guidelines. Stroke. 2019;50(12):e344-e418. PMID 31662037
  3. Campbell BCV, et al. Tenecteplase versus alteplase before thrombectomy for ischemic stroke (EXTEND-IA TNK). N Engl J Med. 2018;378(17):1573-1582. PMID 29694815
  4. Nogueira RG, et al. Thrombectomy 6 to 24 hours after stroke with a mismatch between deficit and infarct (DAWN). N Engl J Med. 2018;378(1):11-21. PMID 29129157
  • Goyal M, et al. Endovascular thrombectomy after large-vessel ischaemic stroke: a meta-analysis. Lancet. 2016;387(10029):1723-1731. PMID 26898852
  • Hacke W, et al. Thrombolysis with alteplase 3 to 4.5 hours after acute ischemic stroke (ECASS III). N Engl J Med. 2008;359(13):1317-1329. PMID 18815396