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Emergency Medicine Neurology 211
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Acute Ischemic Stroke Pharmacotherapy9 Topics|2 Quizzes
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Pre-Quiz: Acute Ischemic Stroke Pharmacotherapy
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Introduction
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Clinical Presentation
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Diagnostics
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Treatment
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Tenectaplase vs Alteplase with Ashley Yeh and Nadia Awad
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Landmark Trials in Ishemic Stroke with Deena Omar and Patrick Bridgeman
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PACU Literature Review #4: Association of Recent Use of Non–Vitamin K Antagonist Oral Anticoagulants With Intracranial Hemorrhage Among Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke Treated With Alteplase
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Summary
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Pre-Quiz: Acute Ischemic Stroke Pharmacotherapy
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Hemorrhagic Stroke9 Topics|3 Quizzes
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Status Epilepticus10 Topics|3 Quizzes
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Migraine and headaches10 Topics|3 Quizzes
Quizzes
Participants 396
Lesson 1,
Topic 4
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Diagnostics
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Diagnosis
- Symptoms of stroke
- Imaging to confirm stroke and stroke type- should be obtained within 20 minutes of arriving to the emergency department
- Non-contrast computed tomography (CT) of the head
- Widely available and quick to obtain
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) may detect ischemia in cases of a TIA or minor ischemic stroke
- In an acute setting an MRI is time consuming and a CT is easier to obtain and can be conducted faster
- Differentiate between an ischemic versus hemorrhagic stroke
- CT may not detect a small/minor stroke
- A normal CT result/reading in the setting of a minor stroke does not include nor exclude ischemia
- Widely available and quick to obtain
- Non-contrast computed tomography (CT) of the head
Differential diagnosis
- rule out other disease states that may mimic a stroke/symptoms of stroke
- This includes the following:
- Hypoglycemia
- This is required to be assessed. This will be further discussed in the treatment section below.
- Migraine (typically recurrent)
- Seizures
- Tumors (history of diagnosis on imaging)
- Intoxication
- Infection
- Electrolyte imbalances (such as hyponatremia)