(5+6) PATH - Cerebrovascular Accidents
(5+6) PATH - Cerebrovascular Accidents
(5+6) PATH - Cerebrovascular Accidents
CNS Block
Color Index: female notes are in purple. Male notes are in Blue. Red is important. Orange is explanation.
432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Cerebrovascular Diseases
Mind Map:
Cerebrovascular Diseases
Occlusion
Other Vascular
Diseases
Intracerebral Subarachnoid
Hemorrhage Hemorrhage
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Terminology
Terminology:
NOTE: Make sure you understand the terms below very well because they are the bases of this lecture
Thrombosis:
Is the formation of a blood clot inside a blood vessel, obstructing the flow of blood through the
circulatory system. It could be due to injury of the blood vessels or in certain conditions.
Embolism:
A clot that breaks free and begins to travel around the body. Not necessarily a detachment of
blood clot (thromboembolism), it can be fat embolism, air embolism, cholesterol embolism,
foreign body embolism (like a bullet).
Hemorrhage:
Is the loss of blood or blood escaping from the circulatory system either internally or externally. It
accompanies the rupture of the blood vessels and leads to direct tissue damage and secondary
Ischemia. Examples of hemorrhage in CVD: subarachnoid and intracerebral hemorrhage.
Hypoxia:
Deprived adequate supply of Oxygen to the body or to a region inside the body (for example here
the brain) and it can be caused by many reasons.
Ischemia:
Is a restriction in blood supply to tissues, causing a shortage of oxygen and glucose needed for
cellular metabolism to keep the tissue alive, specially the brain and heart since they are very
aerobic which means that they count on O2 to generate ATP. If Ischemia is very severe it can lead
to Infarction.
Infarction:
Tissue death (NECROSIS) caused by local lack of oxygen due to complete obstruction of the blood
supply. In the Brain we have Cerebral Infarction and the type of necrosis is Liquefactive Necrosis.
NOTE:
- All what have been typed in RED have been mentioned by Dr. Hala during
the lecture and the details will be discussed within the slides.
- You have to link the cellular changes of the Neurons in the brain with the
cerebrovascular injury, so remember what we took in the previous lecture.
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Introduction
Hypotension
Vascular obstruction
or both
Notes
Cyanide poisoning: when the quantity of oxygen reaching the cells is normal, but the cells
are unable to use the oxygen effectively, due to disabled oxidative phosphorylation
enzymes.
Carbon monoxide poisoning: Carbon monoxide competes with oxygen for binding sites
on hemoglobin molecules. And since carbon monoxide binds tighter than oxygen, it can
prevent the carriage of oxygen. Example: smoking cigarettes over a period of time.
Partial pressure of gases: Gases dissolve, diffuse, and react according to their partial
pressures.
Silent stroke: Asymptomatic and have more long lasting neurological dysfunction than TIA
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Cerebrovascular Diseases
Cerebrovascular Disease is the third leading cause of death (after heart
disease and cancer) in the United States.
It is also the most prevalent neurologic disorder in terms of both morbidity and
mortality rates.
Stroke
It is the clinical term for a disease with acute onset of a neurologic deficit as the
result of vascular lesions (blood vessels), either hemorrhage or loss of blood supply
(by embolus or thrombus occlusion).
NOTE:
- Must differentiate between a thrombus and hemorrhage stroke because each one has a specific
treatment
- First thing you do is CT scan when a patient come from an accident to role out hemorrhage
- When a patient come with a "sudden" severe headache you must think of a stroke yet it can be
asymptomatic as well
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Clinical presentation
- Depends on which part of the brain is injured, and how severely it is injured.
- Sometimes people with stroke have a headache, but stroke can also be
completely painless (at the beginning Asymptomatic).
- It is very important to recognize the warning signs (ex, elderly people and a
person feels dizzy) of stroke and to get immediate medical attention if they
occur (cause it can be prevented).
- If the brain damage sustained has been slight, there is usually complete
recovery, but most survivors of stroke require extensive rehabilitation (ex,TIA)
Symptoms:
Sudden (ACUTE not CHRONIC for weeks or months)
Weakness or paralysis of one side of the body, opposite of the affected side of
brain (most common)
Speech problems, and weak face muscles causing drooling.
Numbness or tingling (also very common)
Base of the brain: problems in balance, vision, swallowing, breathing and
even unconsciousness.
Deep coma, paralysis of one side of the body, and loss of speech, followed by
death or permanent neurological disturbances after recovery (in cases of severe
brain damage).
REMEMBER:
- The most likely artery to be occluded in the brain is the middle cerebral artery which
supplies most parts of the brain.
- Atherosclerosis risk factors: Hypertension, Diabetes, unhealthy cholesterol level,
overweight and obesity, smoking, age.
- Uncontrolled diabetes causes damage to blood vessels and make them more prone to
damage from atherosclerosis and hypertension.
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Ischemia
Causes include:
Cardiac arrest
Severe hypotension or shock (Hypovolemic shock)
Sensitivity to ischemia:
Neurons are much more sensitive to hypoxia than the glial cells (glial cells are more
resistant)
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Gross pathology:
The brain is swollen, with wide gyri and narrowed sulci
The cut surface shows poor demarcation between gray and white matter
(Disrupted Blood brain barrier, and when you make a cut you can’t differentiate between the
white and grey matter)
2- Subacute changes:
Necrosis of tissue
Reactive gliosis (24 hours to 2 weeks The
reaction to tissue damage begins with
infiltration by neutrophils Necrosis of tissue,
influx of macrophages, vascular proliferation and reactive gliosis)
3- Repair
Pseudo laminar necrosis.
(After 2 weeks removal of all necrotic tissue, loss of organized CNS structure
and gliosis)
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Gross pathology:
Non-hemorrhagic infarct:
First 6 hours: the tissue is in unchanged in appearance.
By 48 hours: pale, soft, and swollen- corticomedullary junction indistinct.
From 2 to 10 days: gelatinous and friable-boundaries distinct- edema subsides.
From 10 days to 3 weeks: liquefaction.
Histopathology:
The tissue reaction follows a characteristic sequence:
3- Gliosis.
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Microscopic findings
The microscopic picture and evolution of
hemorrhagic infarction shows parallel
ischemic infarction, with the addition of
blood extravasation and resorption. In
persons receiving anticoagulant treatment
(treatment from thrombosis), hemorrhagic
infarcts may be associated with extensive
intracerebral hematomas (see picture A).
Picture A
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Intracranial Hemorrhages
1- Intracerebral Hemorrhages:
Hemorrhages within the brain (intracerebral) can occur secondary to:
- Hypertension because it increases the impact of blood flow on blood vessels
leading to aneurysm which may rupture and lead to hemorrhage.
- Vascular wall injury (e.g. Vasculitis), it can be caused by:
a) Immune disorders especially SLE, treated by steroids.
b) Infections, such as: syphilis, TB, and Brucellosis which can affect the
brain and blood vessels and cause granulomatous inflammation of
blood vessels and lead them to rupture causing hemorrhage. Treated
by antibiotics.
- Arteriovenous malformation: Congenital anomaly, a tuft of blood vessles
(arteries + capillaries + veins) that proliferate in the brain and may bleed for
an unknown cause.
Hemorrhages associated with the dura (in either subdural or epidural spaces) make
up a pattern associated with trauma.
Patients with Aneurysm sometimes hear murmurs in their ears and get headaches.
Why patients with Aneurysm hear murmurs in their ears? Due to the blood flow inside the sacs
(blood flow causes turbulence inside the sacs)
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
2- Subarachnoid Hemorrhages (In CSF Area):
Subarachnoid Hemorrhages are secondary to:
- Rupture of a saccular (berry) aneurysm.
- Vascular malformation
- Trauma
- Rupture of an intracerebral hemorrhage into the ventricular system
- Hematologic disturbances
- Tumors
REMEMBER: Patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage have:
1. Severe headaches 2. Increased intracranial pressure.
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Hypertensive Cerebrovascular Disease
• Intracerebral hemorrhage (previously mentioned, MOST IMPORTANT)
• Lacunar infarcts (lacuna means empty space)
• Slit hemorrhages (elongated openings)
• Hypertensive encephalopathy
Chronic hypertension: minute aneurysms in vessels that are less than 300 μm in
diameter Charcot-Bouchard microaneurysms rupture
a) Lacunar Infarcts:
- Small cavitary infarcts.
- Deep gray matter (basal ganglia and thalamus), internal capsule, deep white
matter, and pons.
- Cavities of tissue loss with scattered lipid-laden macrophages and surrounding
gliosis (macrophages filled with lipids because they engulfed brain lipids).
- Silent or cause significant neurologic impairment.
b) Slit hemorrhage:
Rupture of the small-caliber (diameter) penetrating vessels and the development of
small hemorrhages
In time, these hemorrhages resorb, leaving behind a slitlike cavity surrounded by
brownish discoloration (due to iron from blood)
Homework!
1- What are the risk factors of strokes?
There is two types of risk factors for stroke:
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432PathologyTeam LECTURE 5&6: Cerebrovascular Diseases
Case 1/ A 42- year-old woman presents to the emergency department at 8 PM, mildly
somnolent and complaining of the "worst headache of her life", which began at 6 AM on
the same day, awakening her. She took acetaminophen (Tylenol) twice during the day,
with some relief. At noon she started to have nausea with vomiting, and by 3 PM she had
developed right arm and leg weakness. She denies any head trauma, which of the
following is the most likely diagnosis?
A. Epilepsy
B. Hypoglycemia
C. Subarachnoid hemorrhage
D. Transient ischemic attack
Case 2/ A 58-year-old man with a 15-year history of hypertension, a history of smoking two
packs of cigarettes a day, and diabetes mellitus experiences the acute onset of weakness
and numbness on the left side of his body and an inability to walk. He admits to having a
severe headache. His wife reports that during the ride to the emergency center he become
lethargic. His blood pressure upon arrival was 192/105 mm Hg. Which of the following is
the most likely finding on the initial CT scan of the head?
A. Hemorrhage in the cerebellum (posterior fossa)
B. Hemorrhage in the right cerebral hemisphere
C. Hemorrhage in the left cerebral hemisphere The cases from case
D. Enlarged cerebral ventricles and prominent gyri files Pathology book
Answers:
- Case 1 / C
- Case 2 / B
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