Large Vessel Stroke
Hemorrhagic Stroke
Stroke Treatment
Neuro A&P
Wild Card
100

The time goal for a large vessel occlusion stroke from the time of arrival to puncture. 

< 60 minutes 


100

The most common cause of a spontaneous intercerebral hemorrhagic stroke. 

Uncontrolled hypertension

100

This thrombolytic medication is used to treat ischemic strokes who meet inclusion exclusion criteria. 

Intravenous Tenecteplase 

100

The part of the brain that all cranial nerves originate from.

Brainstem

100

The type of stroke that describes areas of the brain that are sensitive to periods of hypoperfusion/low blood pressure

Watershed

200

The term of ignoring or neglecting one side of the body. 

Agnosia

200

The color of acute blood shown on the plain CT brain scan. 

White

200

The most effective treatment for removal of clots in the large vessels of the brain.

Mechanical Thrombectomy

200

A patient presenting with left gaze deviation and right hemiplegia may have a stroke in this large vessel in the brain.

Left Middle Cerebral Artery

200

"Dizziness Plus" helps to identify posterior infarctions. Name at least 2 symptoms that can help identify posterior infarctions when someone is dizzy. 

Diplopia, Ataxia, Nausea/Vomiting, Headache, Aphasia, Agnosia

300

The advanced imaging used to diagnose a large vessel occlusion.

CT Angiogram/CT Perfusion

300

The most common reason for spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage. 

Ruptured aneurysm

300

The new AHA medication recommendation for patients with non-disabling stroke symptoms not receiving a thrombolytic. 

Dual antiplatelet medications (DAPT) 

300

The two arteries which run up the cervical spine and merge to become the basilar artery.

Vertebral Arteries 

300

True or False: Tenecteplase can only be reconstituted with 5.2ml of dextrose solution injection  

False: Dextrose and Tenecteplase are incompatible, Tenecteplase is mixed with 5.2ml sterile water for injection. 


400

The scoring system used post mechanical thrombectomy that grades the amount of perfusion restored to the previously blocked area of the brain.

TICI Score (0, 1, 2a, 2b, 3) 

400

The recommended SBP parameter for hemorrhagic strokes. 

SBP 130-150 mmHG

400

The approximate amount of brain cells damaged per minute during a stroke. 

1.9 million

400

The cerebral artery involved in the stroke that presents with dizziness, nausea & vomiting, nystagmus and most likely to result in locked-in syndrome.

Basilar Artery

400

The percentage of strokes that originate from the posterior circulation. 

20-30%

500

The term for stroke signs/symptoms that help identify posterior infarctions originating for the cortex of the brain.

Cortical Signs: Agnosia, Aphasia, Ataxia, Visual Changes

500

The oral medication used to prevent vasospasms in SAH patients. 

Nimodipine

500

The 3 ways to treat an ischemic stroke patient.

Tenecteplase (thrombolytic), Mechanical thrombectomy, or permissive hypertension

500

The spider like thin, delicate middle layer surrounding the brain, where major cerebral blood vessels are located. 

Arachnoid/Subarachnoid Layer

500

Recommended glucose range for acute stroke patients

goal is 130-180 

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