cerebrovascular accident
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Stroke is defined by the World Health Organization as a clinical syndrome consisting of 'rapidly developing clinical signs of focal (at times global) disturbance of cerebral function, lasting more than 24 h or leading to death with no apparent cause other than that of vascular origin' (1).
- a transient ischaemic attack (TIA) is defined as stroke symptoms and signs
that resolve within 24 hours
- strokes result from:
- cerebral infarction (84%):
- secondary to thrombosis (53%); or
- embolus (31%)
- primary intracerebral haemorrhage (10%)
- subarachnoid haemorrhage (6%)
- a non-disabling stroke is defined as a stroke with symptoms that last for
more than 24 hours but later resolve, leaving no permanent disability
- symptoms experienced depend on the part of the brain that is affected
- usually occur suddenly and without any warning
- common symptoms include loss of movement or sensation in an arm or leg,
problems speaking, a drooping of one side of the face or problems with
vision
- a stroke can occur at any age
- average age for stroke varies across the UK, with a median age of 77 years (interquartile range 67 to 85)
- a quarter of strokes occur in people of working age
- first-ever stroke affects 230 people per 100,000 each year, with over 80,000
people hospitalised per year in England
- the Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme show that 13.6% of people admitted
to hospital with stroke in England and Wales died (either in hospital or after
being discharged from inpatient care) within 30 days
- are approximately 1.2 million stroke survivors in the UK
- are approximately 1.2 million stroke survivors in the UK
- risk of recurrent stroke is 26% within 5 years of a first stroke and 39% by 10 years
Notes:
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Reference:
- (1) Hatano S (1976) Experience from a multicentre stroke register: a preliminary report. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 54: 541-53.
- (2) NICE (May 2019). The diagnosis and acute management of stroke and transient ischaemic attacks
Last edited 06/2019 and last reviewed 04/2022
Links:
- epidemiology
- pathogenesis
- definitions
- approaches to thinking about stroke
- risk factors
- aetiology of thrombotic stroke
- aetiology of intracerebral haemorrhage
- aetiology of subarachnoid haemorrhage
- clinical features
- investigations
- differential diagnosis
- management
- complications
- prognosis
- referral criteria from primary care - admission for CVA
- transient ischaemic attack
- NICE guidance - stroke rehabilitation - long-term rehabilitation after stroke
- FAST tool for stroke and TIA