â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Acute stroke represents a neurological emergency. Timely differentiation between ischemic and hemorrhagic profiles is critical to determine the therapeutic pathway.
â– CLINICAL DYNAMICS:
1. Ischemic Stroke (85% of cases):
- Origin: Caused by thrombotic or embolic occlusion of a cerebral artery, most commonly the Middle Cerebral Artery (MCA).
- Cascade: Focal tissue ischemia triggers an ischemic cascade, depleting ATP, causing cellular depolarization, toxic glutamate release, and ultimate necrotic cell death.
2. Hemorrhagic Stroke (15% of cases):
- Origin: Caused by the rupture of a blood vessel in the brain parenchyma (intracerebral hemorrhage, often from long-standing hypertension eroding Charcot-Bouchard aneurysms) or into the subarachnoid space (subarachnoid hemorrhage, often from a ruptured saccular berry aneurysm).
â– ETIOLOGICAL PROFILE & RISK FACTORS:
Major etiological drivers include genetic predispositions (autosomal patterns and chromosomal translocations) and environmental triggers like toxic chemical exposure, mechanical stress, or chronic viral infections.
â– SUBCLINICAL PHENOTYPE DYNAMICS:
Early physiological shifts typically occur without overt symptom presentation, necessitating highly sensitive laboratory screening to detect disease onset.
[HY-BOARD-1203]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
A non-contrast head CT scan is the absolute first-line screening diagnostic of choice. Because acute ischemia is initially invisible on CT, the main purpose is to rule out hemorrhagic stroke before administering fibrinolytic agents like recombinant tPA, which would be fatal if given during active intracranial hemorrhage. Assess family history and genetic screens to identify high-risk patients before symptoms present. Monitor high-sensitivity panels regularly in at-risk cohorts to enable timely preventative actions.