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Concorde Career College Physical Therapist Assistant. PTA 150: Fundamentals of Treatment II Day 9 & 10 CVA. Objectives. Describe the pathophysiology of a CVA Describe physical and neurological impairments associated with CVA
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Concorde Career CollegePhysical Therapist Assistant PTA 150: Fundamentals of Treatment IIDay 9 & 10 CVA Concorde Career College
Objectives • Describe the pathophysiology of a CVA • Describe physical and neurological impairments associated with CVA • Describe physical therapy treatment interventions for patients after a CVA Concorde Career College
Cerebrovascular Accident (CVA)Sudden loss of neurological function caused by an interruption of the blood flow to the brain O’Sullivan, pg. 705 Concorde Career College
CVA Epidemiology • The 3rd leading cause of death in the US • THE most common cause for disability in US adults • Incidence of stroke 1.25 times greater for males than females • Compared to whites, African-Americans have 2x the risk of first-ever stroke (higher also with Mexican-Americans, American Indians, and Alaska Natives) Concorde Career College
Definitions • CVA is used interchangeably with the term “stroke” • Neurological deficits must remain for > 24 hours to be classified as a stroke • Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) • Temporary interruption of blood flow to brain • Symptoms resolve quickly (within 24 hours) • Few if any permanent signs or symptoms • Precursor to stroke • About 14% of persons surviving an initial stroke or TIA will experience another one within a year Concorde Career College
Types of Strokes • Hemorrhagic Stroke • Blood vessels rupture, blood leaks into the brain • 1˚ Cerebral Hemorrhage results from ruptured blood vessels weakened by atherosclerosis • Results in ↑ ICP and restricts blood flow to the brain • Subarachnoid Hemorrhage (SAH) – bleeding b/w arachnoid layer and pia mater • Common cause: aneurysm & AVM • Subdural Hemorrhage (SDH) – bleeding b/w dura mater and arachnoid layer • Common cause is trauma Concorde Career College
Types of Strokes • Ischemic Stroke • Most common (~80%) • A clot blocks or impairs blood flow to the brain • Can result from a Thrombosis • Results from platelet adhesions & aggregation on plaques • Cerebral Thrombosis: Blood clot forms in cerebral artery • Thrombi lead to ischemia = cerebral infarction • Can result from an Embolus • Dislodged matter; blood clot, plaque, fat, gas, air, tissue that dislodges in the body and travels to the brain occluding cerebral circulation Concorde Career College
Impact • Severity and symptoms of stroke depend on • Location of ischemic process • Size of the ischemic area • Nature & function of structures involved • Availability of collateral flow • O’Sullivan , page 708 Concorde Career College
Anterior Cerebral Artery SyndromeMiddle Cerebral Artery SyndromePosterior Cerebral Artery SyndromeVertebrobasilar Artery SyndromeInternal Carotid Artery SyndromeLacunar Syndrome Vascular Syndromes Concorde Career College
Anterior Cerebral Artery (ACA) • Supplies medial part of the frontal and parietal lobe, basal ganglia and corpus callosum Concorde Career College
ACA Syndrome • Contralateral sensory & motor loss with LEs affected more than UEs • Urinary incontinence • Mental impairment (confusion, amnesia) • Apraxia affecting ability to imitate or perform bimanual tasks • Abulia (lack of desire to carry out an action), slowness, delayed movements, lack of spontaneous movements • Behavioral changes Concorde Career College
Medial Cerebral Artery (MCA) • Supplies lateral cerebral hemispheres (incl. frontal, parietal and temporal lobes) Concorde Career College
MCA Syndrome • Contralateral hemiparesis of face and UE mainly • Pure motor hemiplegia (lacunar stroke) • Contralateral hemisensory loss of face & UE mainly • Speech impairment: Broca’s aphasia, Wernicke’s aphasia, global aphasis • Perceptual deficits: unilateral neglect, depth perception difficulties, agnosia • Apraxia • Ataxia of contralateral limbs (sensory ataxia) • Contralateral hemianopsia • Table 18.2 (O’Sullivan) Concorde Career College
Posterior Cerebral Artery (PCA) • Supplies occipital lobe, medial and inferior temporal lobe, thalamus & brain Concorde Career College
PCA Syndrome • Contralateral sensory & motor loss (hemianesthesia) • Hemianopsia • Visual agnosia, prosopagnosia and cortical blindness • Oculomotor nerve palsy • Involuntary movement • Choreoathetosis, intention tremor, hemiballismus • Thalamic pain • Pusher syndrome Concorde Career College
Hemiballismus - Video http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=hemiballismus&view=detail&mid=290D280B1B53C5E9CDEB290D280B1B53C5E9CDEB&first=0&FORM=LKVR Concorde Career College
Vertebrobasilar Artery • Vertebral artery arises from the subclavian artery, travels into the brain and then merge to form the basilar artery • Vertebral artery supplies the cerebellum and medulla • Basilar artery supplies the pons, internal ear, and cerebellum Concorde Career College
Vertebrobasilar Artery Syndrome • Wide variety of symptoms with ipsilateral and contralateral signs • Numerous cerebellar and cranial nerve abnormalities • Refer to Table 18.4 in O’Sullivan for details Concorde Career College
Internal Carotid Artery (ACA) Syndrome • Supplies both the MCA and ACA • Complete occlusion leads to ↑↑ cerebral edema = coma & possible death • Incomplete occlusion = mix of ACA & MCA syndromes Concorde Career College
Lacunar Infarct • Caused by small vessel disease deep in cerebral white matter Concorde Career College
Lacunar Syndrome • Contralateral weakness • Sensory loss • Dystonia/Involuntary movement • Choreoathetosis, hemiballismus • Ataxia Concorde Career College
CVA – Major Risk Factors Primary Secondary Obesity Hypercholesteremia Physical Inactivity ↑ Alcohol consumption • Atherosclerosis • HTN • Heart disease • Diabetes • Smoking • TIA Concorde Career College
Stroke Warning Signs TIME IS BRAIN • Sudden numbness or weakness of the face, arm or leg, especially on one side of the body • Sudden confusion, trouble speaking or understanding • Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes • Sudden trouble walking, dizziness, loss of balance or coordination • Sudden, severe headache with no known cause www.StrokeAssociation.org Concorde Career College
Imaging - CT • Frontal lobe stroke Concorde Career College
Imaging - MRI Concorde Career College
CVA Medical Management • Reestablish cerebral circulation and oxygenation • Control blood pressure • Maintain sufficient cardiac output • Restore/maintain fluid & electrolyte balance • Maintain blood glucose levels • Control ICP • Maintain bladder function (possible use of catheter) • Maintain integrity of skin and joints Concorde Career College
Pharmacological Management • Anticoagulants (heparin, coumadin); to reduce clots and maintain profusion) • Antiplatelets (aspirin); used to decrease the risk of recurrent stroke • Antihypertensives Concorde Career College
Surgical Intervention • Endarterectomy – surgical removal of lining and plaque in an artery • Used to prevent strokes (not treat them) • In the case of hemorrhage – surgery to repair rupture, prevent further bleeding evacuate the clot • Resection of unruptured AVM if found and risk is high Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Sensation Impairments • ↓ sensory perception & ability to process sensory information • Touch, temperature, position, kinesthetic, pain • ASTEROGNOSIS • The inability to identify an object by touch without visual input • Pain • Can experience severe headaches, neck or facial pain • Central post-stroke (thalamic) pain: constant, severe burning with intermittent sharp pains Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Visual Impairments • Eye movements (sluggish, reflexive, ataxic) • Hemianopsia: Blindness in half of each eye’s visual field (loss on the nasal side and half on temple side) • Visual neglect • Difficulties w/ depth perception & spatial relationships • Forced gaze deviation • Brainstem strokes may result in diplopia, oscillopsia or visual distortions Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments Motor Impairments – Stages of Motor Recovery • Stage 1 - Flaccidity • Stage 2 - Minimal voluntary movement; may see synergies and spasticity develop • Stage 3 – Voluntary control the movement synergies; spasticity may ↑ further • (Continued) Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments Motor Impairments – Stages of Motor Recovery • Stage 4 – movement combinations that do not follow the path of synergy are mastered; spasticity ↓ • Stage 5 – Difficult movement combinations are learned • Stage 6 – disappearance of spasticity, individual joint movements become possible and coordination approaches normal Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Motor Impairments • Weakness (paresis) • Occurs in 80-90% of all patients after stroke • Varies depending on location and size of stroke • Can result in complete paralysis/hemiparesis • Typically, more distal muscles exhibit greater weakness • May even see weakness on the “normal” side • Changes in muscle composition 2˚ weakness & disuse • Atrophy, ↓ Fast twitch type II, ↑ slow twitch type I • ↑ effort and fatigability Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Motor Impairments • Changes in tone • Flaccidity – present immediately as a result of cerebral shock; usually short-lived but sometimes persists • Spasticity/hypertonicity • Occurs in about 90% of patients after stroke • Posturing of limbs is common with mod → severe spasticity • Spasms (internal or external stimulation) Concorde Career College
Posturing Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Motor Impairments • Abnormal synergistic movement patterns • Associated with spasticity, may ↓ with recovery • Review Table 18.5 in O’Sullivan • Impaired reflex responses (mild to severe) • Vary according to stage of recovery • Hyporeflexia with flaccidity → hyperreflexia with spasticity • ↑ stretch reflex – clonus, clasp-knife, (+) Babinski • ATNR • Associated reactions Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Motor Impairments • Impaired coordination responses • Cerebellar strokes = ataxia & weakness • Basal Ganglia involvement = slow movements (bradykinesia) & involuntary movements (choreoathetosis, hemiballismus) Concorde Career College
Video - Cerebellar Ataxia • http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=cerebellar+ataxia&view=detail&mid=F8130C8EBA0E3DD338C5F8130C8EBA0E3DD338C5&first=1&FORM=LKVR3 • http://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=cerebellar+ataxia&view=detail&mid=08E8A16F23E5E860EE9008E8A16F23E5E860EE90&first=21&FORM=LKVR18 Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Motor Impairments • Altered motor programming • Motor praxis • Ideational apraxia • Ideomotor apraxia • Diminished muscle performance for ADL • Strength, Power, Endurance Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Postural Control & Balance Impairments • May experience difficulty with balance 2˚ to an external force or during self-initiated exercises • Corrective responses to perturbations are often inadequate = fall • Asymmetry typically noted in posture • Typically see falls to the same side as weakness • Pusher Syndrome • Active pushing of the uninvolved side offsets muscle control of the involved side (falls, leaning) Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Speech and Language Impairments • Aphasia – an acquired communication disorder caused by brain damage and is characterized by an impairment of language comprehension, formulation and use. (O’Sullivan, pg. 722) Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Speech and Language Impairments • Receptive Aphasia • aka. Wernicke’s/Sensory/Fluent Aphasia • Auditory and reading comprehension impaired • Speech is functional • Expressive Aphasia • aka. Broca’s/Nonfluent Aphasia • Difficulty finding words to express ideas • Global Aphasia • Receptive and Expressive Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Speech and Language Impairments • Dysarthria • Nasal quality of speech, slurred words • Dysphonia • Difficulty producing sounds • Dysphagia • Difficulty in swallowing Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Altered Perception • Body scheme – relationship of body parts to one another as well as the body’s relationship to the environment • Body image – visual and mental image of one’s body may be altered following a stroke • Includes the individual’s feelings about this image Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Examples of body scheme/image impairments: • Unilateral Neglect • Visual recognition or attention on involved side • Limb neglect or attention on involved side • Anosognosia – denial, neglect or unawareness of one’s paralysis • Somatoagnosia – lack of awareness of one’s body structure and its relationship to the environment • Right-left discrimination • Finger agnosia Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Altered Perception • Agnosia - inability to recognize incoming information despite intact sensory capabilities (O’Sullivan, pg 723) • Visual object agnosia • Auditory agnosia • Tactile agnosia (astereoagnosia) • Spatial relationship – difficulty determining the relationship between the body and 2 or more objects in the environment Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Cognitive Impairments • ↓ alertness • ↓ attention • Altered orientation • Diminished memory • Impaired executive function Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Cognitive Impairments – Vocabulary • Confabulation • Perseveration • Multi-infarct dementia • Delirium Concorde Career College
Primary Impairments • Alterations in Affect • Pseudobulbar Affect • A.k.a. emotional dysregulation syndrome or emotional lability • Emotional outbursts (crying, laughing) • Apathy • Euphoria • ↑ irritability or frustration • Social inappropriateness • Depression Concorde Career College