Criado por greenfylde
quase 11 anos atrás
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Acute management (first hours) for stroke ABCS 1. Ensure airway a. (to avoid hypoxia/aspirat)2. Monitor blood glucose a. Keep BM 4-11mmol/L 3. Monitor BPa. But treating even very high may harm b/c autoreg impaired, even a 20% fall may compromise cerebral perfusionb. If on HRT, stop it4. Urgent CT/MRI if : *CT will rule out py haemorrhage *MRI most sensitive for an acute infarct a. thrombolysis consideredb. cerebellar stroke i. cerebellar hemartomas may need urgent evac c. unusual presentation i. ie alt diagnosis likely d. high risk of haemorrhage i. decreased GCS, raised ICP signs, severe headache, meningism, progressive symps, known bleeding tendency or anticoagulation e. (otherwise imaging can wait – aim 5. Thrombolysis a. Consider if 18-80y b. Symp onset c. + NO contraindic i. Major infarct or haemorrhage on CT ii. Mild (non-disabling) deficits iii. Recent surg, trauma, or obstetric delivery iv. Past CNS haemorrhage v. AVMalform or aneurysm vi. Severe liver disease, varices, or portal hypertens vii. Seizures at presentation viii. Recent arterial or venous punct at non compressible site ix. Anticoags or PTT >15s x. Platelet xi. BP >220/130 6. ‘Nil by mouth’ until swallowing assessed 7. Keep hydrated a. But not over hyd (risk of cereb edema) 8. Explain what has happened a. Communic fully w/pt, rels + carers over difficult decisions eg deciding on kindest lvl of intervention taking into account qual of life, coexist condits, prognosis 9. Antiplatelet agents- once hemorrhagic stroke exclude, give aspirin 300mg 10. Admission to stroke unit for specialist nursing/physio saves lives + is great motivator
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