Saturday, August 31, 2024

occipital stroke

 What is a right sided ischemic stroke?

Right-Sided Stroke: Effects, Treatment, and Recovery

Ischemic. An ischemic stroke is caused by a decrease in blood flow to an area of the brain. Even a few minutes of inadequate blood flow can cause damage to the brain tissue. An ischemic stroke can be caused by a blood clot in a large blood vessel or a small blood vessel.Dec 17, 2021

In an ischemic stroke, a blood clot blocks the blood supply to part of the brain. In a TIA, unlike a stroke, the blockage is brief and there is no permanent damage. The blockage that occurs during a TIA often results from a buildup of cholesterol-containing fatty deposits called plaques in an artery. 9, 2024

A transient ischaemic attack (TIA), or mini stroke, happens when there's a temporary disruption in the blood supply to part of the brain. The disruption in blood supply results in a lack of oxygen to the brain. This can cause sudden symptoms like those of a stroke.Jun 26, 2024


Symptoms of an occipital stroke include a loss of a visual field, double vision, or difficulty recognizing faces. They may also entail nonvisual symptoms, such as a headache and a change in consciousness. The causes involve ischemia or hemorrhage within a blood vessel that supplies the brain.Oct 20, 2023

What happens if you have a stroke in your occipital lobe?
When the occipital lobes of the brain are completely affected by a stroke, it causes total vision loss. This is called “cortical blindness.”10 It means the vision loss was caused by damage to the cortex of the brain. Some occipital stroke survivors have a condition called visual anosognosia .May 9, 2023



dysarthria

 dysarthria

Dysarthria happens when the muscles used for speech are weak or are hard to control. Dysarthria often causes slurred or slow speech that can be difficult to understand.


Common causes of dysarthria include conditions that affect the nervous system or that cause facial paralysis. These conditions may cause tongue or throat muscle weakness. Certain medicines also can cause dysarthria.

 What is a PFO on a TEE?

Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) is accepted as the method of choice for the diagnosis of the patent foramen ovale (PFO).

 However, direct anatomic confirmation regarding the presence or absence of a PFO on transesophageal imaging has been obtained in only a limited number of patients.


Definition. Patent foramen ovale (PFO) is a hole between the left and right atria (upper chambers) of the heart. This hole exists in everyone before birth, but most often closes shortly after being born. PFO is what the hole is called when it fails to close naturally after a baby is born.

pulmonary embolism (PE)

 Reassuring against sepsis, will hold off on fluids given concern for PE

pulmonary embolism (PE) is a blood clot that develops in a blood vessel elsewhere in the body (often the leg), travels to an artery in the lung, and suddenly forms a blockage of the artery.

Fluid Management in Sepsis Ryan M. Brown, MD1 and Matthew W. Semler, MD, MSc1

Abstract

Among critically ill adults, sepsis remains both common and lethal. In addition to antibiotics and source control, fluid resuscitation is a fundamental sepsis therapy. The physiology of fluid resuscitation for sepsis, however, is complex. A landmark trial found early goal-directed sepsis resuscitation reduced mortality, but three recent multicenter trials did not confirm this benefit. Multiple trials in resource-limited settings have found increased mortality with early fluid bolus administration in sepsis, and the optimal approach to early sepsis resuscitation across settings remains unknown. After initial resuscitation, excessive fluid administration may contribute to edema and organ dysfunction. 

Using dynamic variables such as passive leg raise testing can predict a patient’s hemodynamic response to fluid administration better than static variables such as central venous pressure. 

Whether using measures of “fluid responsiveness” to guide fluid administration improves patient outcomes, however, remains unknown. 

New evidence suggests improved patient outcomes with use of balanced crystalloids compared to saline in sepsis.

Albumin may be beneficial in septic shock, but other colloids such as starches, dextrans and gelatins appear to increase the risk of death and acute kidney injury.

For the clinician caring for sepsis patients today, the initial administration of 20 mL/kg of intravenous balanced crystalloid, followed by consideration of the risks and benefits of subsequent fluid administration represents a reasonable approach.

 Additional research is urgently needed to define the optimal dose, rate, and composition of intravenous fluid during the management of patients with sepsis and septic shock.

INTRODUCTION

Sepsis, a dysregulated host response to severe infection, accounts for 2–6% of all hospital admissions and carries an in-hospital mortality of up to 15%. Mortality is even greater when sepsis is accompanied by hypotension and hypoperfusion (septic shock).

 Guidelines for sepsis management recommend early administration of antibiotics and intravenous (IV) fluid in addition to source control. 

Despite multiple recent clinical trials examining fluid management in sepsis, fundamental questions about which intravenous fluid to administer and in what amount remain unanswered. This article summarizes the physiologic principles and scientific evidence currently available to help clinicians make decisions regarding fluid management for patients with sepsis.

PHYSIOLOGY OF FLUID ADMINISTRATION

Patients with sepsis experience altered oxygen delivery and extraction, in part due to varying degrees of actual and relative intravascular volume depletion from decreased oral intake, increased insensible losses, sepsis-induced vasodilation, increased venous capacitance, and capillary leakage.

 The classic understanding is that during early sepsis most patients experience “relative hypovolemia” and the administration of intravenous fluid increases preload, which increases cardiac output, resulting in improved oxygen delivery to organs experiencing tissue hypoxia (Figure 1).

 This classic understanding is increasingly recognized to be overly simplistic. There are many factors that influence tissue oxygen delivery and extraction other than hemodynamics. In addition, the hemodynamic response to intravenous fluid is determined by an intricate interaction of mean systemic filling pressure, right atrial pressure, venous resistance, ventricular compliance, and afterload.4

 Fluid administration may affect many of these components, some of them deleteriously (e.g., fluid administration may decrease venous return by increasing right atrial pressure).5,6 The complexity of patients’ responses to fluid administration in sepsis is evidenced by numerous studies reporting that approximately half of patients with sepsis do not experience hemodynamic improvement after fluid bolus administration, and that right atrial pressure poorly predicts hemodynamic improvement with intravenous fluid administration.7–9 Moreover, the century-old Starling model conceptualizing maintenance of vascular volume as the balance of hydrostatic and oncotic pressure gradients between the vessel lumen and interstitial space has been challenged by the recent recognition of the importance of the endothelial glycocalyx.10 Because it is a primary determinant of membrane permeability, damage to the glycocalyx during sepsis may alter patients’ response to fluid resuscitation. Although the clinical implications of these findings are not yet fully understood, they argue against an overly simplified approach to understanding the effects of fluid composition and dose in sepsis.

INITIAL SEPSIS RESUSCITATION

Fluid administration is considered a fundamental part of early sepsis treatment.1

 In the landmark Early Goal-Directed Therapy (EGDT) trial,11 Rivers and colleagues compared usual care to a protocolized approach to sepsis resuscitation using intravenous fluids, vasopressors, and blood transfusion among 263 patients in a single emergency department. In the usual care group, patients received arterial and central venous catheterization and were administered IV fluid to maintain a central venous pressure (CVP) of 8–12 mm Hg, and vasopressors to maintain mean arterial pressure (MAP) ≥65 mm Hg. The EGDT group used the same hemodynamic targets, but additionally received continuous monitoring of central venous oxygen saturation, with blood transfusion for a hematocrit less than 30% and dobutamine administration to achieve a central venous saturation ≥ 70%. During the 6 hours of intervention, EGDT patients received more IV fluid (mean 5.0 vs 3.5 L; P < 0.001), blood transfusions (64.1% vs 18.5%; P<0.001), and dobutamine (13.7% vs 0.8%; P < 0.001). In-hospital mortality was 16% lower with EGDT compared to usual care (46.5% vs 30.5%; P = 0.009).


The remarkable improvement in mortality reported in this landmark trial led to incorporation of goal-directed fluid resuscitation into the recommendations for early sepsis management in the Surviving Sepsis Campaign (SSC) Guidelines.12 For more than a decade, this approach to sepsis fluid management was recommended in international guidelines, consensus statements, and hospital quality metrics. Three recent large, multicenter trials, however, did not report a benefit to EGDT compared to current usual sepsis care. The ProMISE13 (n=1243), ARISE14 (n=1588), and ProCESS15 (n=1341) trials all compared usual care to EGDT protocols based on the original EGDT trial. All three failed to demonstrate a benefit with EGDT (or protocolized usual care in ProCESS). A patient-level meta-analysis of these three trials3 also found no mortality benefit to EGDT. All-cause mortality at 90 days was 24.9% with EGDT and 25.4% with usual care (P = 0.97). Furthermore, the meta-analysis reported that EGDT increased the length of stay in the intensive care unit (5.3 vs 4.9 days; P = 0.04), the duration of cardiovascular support (1.9 vs 2.9 days; P = 0.01), and the cost of the hospitalization.


Several factors may account for the difference in results between the Rivers trial and the three recent trials of EGDT. First, the Rivers trial was a small, single center trial and therefore prone to type I error. Second, the difference between the EGDT and usual care groups in volume of fluid administered was modest in all three recent trials. In ProCESS, the trial with the largest separation between groups, there was a 1.1 L difference in fluid administered in the first 6 hours after enrollment, which falls short of the 1.5 L difference seen in the original Rivers study (Figure 2). Third, patients in the recent three trials were enrolled later after presentation to the Emergency Department, potentially missing a key period of early intervention. Fourth, the significantly lower mortality rates in the modern trials could imply that they enrolled less severely ill patients than the original trial, limiting the potential benefit of EGDT. Ultimately, the many changes in critical care and sepsis management over the decade and a half between the original EGDT and the three recent trials may preclude direct comparison of the studies and a conclusive understanding of the implications for optimal fluid management in early sepsis.