CVA (Stroke) – Comprehensive Medical Guide
Overview
Stroke, medically known as cerebrovascular accident (CVA), occurs when blood flow to a part of the brain is abruptly interrupted, leading to tissue damage. There are two main types:
- Ischemic stroke (≈ 85% of cases) – caused by a clot that blocks an artery.
- Hemorrhagic stroke – caused by bleeding from a ruptured vessel.
Stroke can affect anyone, but incidence rises sharply after age 55. Each year in the United States, roughly 795,000 people experience a stroke, and it is the second leading cause of death worldwide. Survivors often face long‑term disability; according to the CDC, 1 in 4 adults will have a stroke in their lifetime.
Symptoms
Stroke symptoms usually appear suddenly. Remember the acronym FAST for the most common warning signs:
- Face drooping – one side of the face may appear uneven.
- Arm weakness – difficulty raising one arm.
- Speech difficulty – slurred or incoherent speech.
- Time to call emergency services (9‑1‑1).
Complete Symptom List
- Sudden numbness or weakness in the face, arm, or leg, especially on one side of the body.
- Sudden confusion, trouble speaking or understanding speech.
- Sudden trouble seeing in one or both eyes.
- Sudden difficulty walking, dizziness, loss of balance or coordination.
- Sudden severe headache with no known cause (more common in hemorrhagic stroke).
- Sudden nausea or vomiting.
- Sudden loss of consciousness or fainting.
- Sudden facial twitching or jerking movements.
- Sudden fainting or seizures (especially in patients with prior brain disease).
Causes and Risk Factors
What Causes a Stroke?
- Ischemic: Thrombus (blood clot) forming in a brain artery (thrombotic stroke) or an embolus traveling from elsewhere (embolic stroke).
- Hemorrhagic: Rupture of a weakened vessel due to hypertension, aneurysm, arteriovenous malformation (AVM), or amyloid angiopathy.
- Transient ischemic attack (TIA) – a “mini‑stroke” lasting minutes to hours that resolves spontaneously but signals high future stroke risk.
Key Risk Factors
- High blood pressure (hypertension) – the single biggest modifiable risk.
- Smoking and exposure to second‑hand smoke.
- Diabetes mellitus.
- High LDL cholesterol or low HDL cholesterol.
- Atrial fibrillation or other cardiac arrhythmias.
- Obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m²).
- Physical inactivity.
- Heavy alcohol use (≥ 2 drinks/day for men, ≥ 1 for women).
- Family history of stroke or genetic disorders (e.g., sickle cell disease).
- Age ≥ 55 years; risk doubles each decade after 55.
- Sex – men have slightly higher incidence, but women have higher mortality and more severe disability.
Diagnosis
Rapid assessment is essential—every minute of untreated ischemic stroke may cost ~1.9 million neurons.
Initial Clinical Evaluation
- Focused neurological exam (NIH Stroke Scale).
- Vital signs, blood glucose (to rule out hypoglycemia mimicking stroke).
- History of symptom onset (critical for treatment window).
Imaging and Tests
- Non‑contrast CT head – first‑line; rules out hemorrhage within minutes.
- CT angiography (CTA) or MR angiography (MRA) – visualize arterial occlusion.
- Diffusion‑weighted MRI – most sensitive for early ischemic changes.
- Carotid duplex ultrasound – assesses for stenosis of carotid arteries.
- Electrocardiogram (ECG) & Holter monitoring – detect atrial fibrillation or other arrhythmias.
- Blood work: CBC, coagulation profile, lipid panel, HbA1c, renal function.
Treatment Options
Acute Management (First Hours)
- Ischemic stroke
- tPA (tissue plasminogen activator) – intravenous alteplase given within 3‑4.5 hours of onset (per AHA/ASA guidelines).
- Endovascular thrombectomy – mechanical clot retrieval for large‑vessel occlusions, effective up to 24 hours in selected patients.
- Hemorrhagic stroke
- Blood pressure lowering (target systolic 140 mmHg) to reduce re‑bleeding.
- Surgical evacuation (craniotomy) for large intracerebral hemorrhage or subarachnoid hemorrhage.
- Supportive care: airway protection, glucose control, temperature management, and anticoagulation reversal if needed.
Secondary Prevention (After the Acute Phase)
- Antiplatelet therapy – aspirin 81‑325 mg daily or clopidogrel for non‑cardioembolic strokes.
- Anticoagulation – warfarin, dabigatran, apixaban, or rivaroxaban for atrial fibrillation or cardioembolic source.
- Statin therapy – high‑intensity statins (e.g., atorvastatin 40‑80 mg) to lower LDL < 70 mg/dL.
- Blood pressure control – target < 130/80 mmHg (ACC/AHA 2017).
- Diabetes management – HbA1c < 7 % (individualized).
- Lifestyle changes: smoking cessation, regular aerobic exercise (≥150 min/week), Mediterranean‑style diet, weight loss.
Living with CVA (Stroke)
Rehabilitation
- Physical therapy – gait training, strength, balance.
- Occupational therapy – ADL (activities of daily living) adaptation, assistive devices.
- Speech‑language pathology – swallowing safety and communication.
- Neuropsychology – cognitive remediation, mood management.
Daily Management Tips
- Take medications exactly as prescribed; use pill organizers or smartphone reminders.
- Monitor blood pressure at home; keep a log for your provider.
- Maintain a stroke‑friendly diet: plenty of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, fish, and nuts; limit salt and processed foods.
- Stay physically active – even short walks multiple times a day improve circulation.
- Track weight and waist circumference.
- Attend regular follow‑up appointments (neurology, cardiology, primary care).
- Arrange home safety modifications: grab bars, non‑slip mats, adequate lighting.
- Seek support groups (American Stroke Association, local rehab centers) for emotional coping.
Prevention
Primary and secondary prevention overlap; the following strategies are evidence‑based:
- Blood pressure control – lifestyle (DASH diet, reduced sodium < 1,500 mg/day) + antihypertensives.
- Quit smoking – behavioral counseling, nicotine replacement, varenicline.
- Manage cholesterol – diet, statins, possibly ezetimibe or PCSK9 inhibitors for high‑risk patients.
- Control atrial fibrillation – anticoagulation, rate/rhythm control.
- Diabetes optimization – medications, diet, regular glucose monitoring.
- Weight management – aim for BMI 18.5‑24.9 kg/m².
- Regular physical activity – at least 150 min/week moderate intensity.
- Limit alcohol – ≤ 2 drinks/day for men, ≤ 1 for women.
- Vaccinations – flu and pneumococcal vaccines reduce infection‑related strokes.
Complications
If not promptly treated or adequately managed, stroke can lead to:
- Physical deficits – hemiplegia, chronic pain, spasticity.
- Speech & swallowing disorders – dysarthria, dysphagia → aspiration pneumonia.
- Cognitive impairment – memory loss, executive dysfunction, dementia.
- Emotional/psychological issues – depression, anxiety, post‑stroke fatigue.
- Seizures – especially after hemorrhagic stroke.
- Deep vein thrombosis (DVT) & pulmonary embolism – due to immobility.
- Falls – increased risk from balance deficits.
- Recurrent stroke – highest risk within the first 90 days.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Sudden facial droop or uneven smile.
- Sudden weakness or numbness in an arm or leg, especially on one side.
- Sudden trouble speaking, slurred speech, or inability to understand.
- Sudden vision loss or double vision.
- Sudden severe headache with no known cause.
- Sudden dizziness, loss of balance, or difficulty walking.
- Any sudden change in consciousness or confusion.
Time is brain. Even if symptoms improve, seek care—some strokes (TIA) resolve spontaneously but still signal high risk for a major stroke.
References
- Mayo Clinic. “Stroke.” mayoclinic.org.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Stroke Facts.” cdc.gov.
- American Heart Association / American Stroke Association. “Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke.” 2024 Update.
- World Health Organization. “Stroke: Key Facts.” who.int.
- Cleveland Clinic. “Hemorrhagic Stroke.” clevelandclinic.org.
- National Institutes of Health. “Understanding Stroke Risk Factors.” ninds.nih.gov.