Como diferenciar um AVC isquêmico X AVC hemorrágico - EGÍDIO NETO

READ THE DESCRIPTION!!! Did you like it? Leave a LIKE and SUBSCRIBE! ⬇Follow me on Instagram, here⬇   / ​   🔴Subscribe to the YouTube Channel, here:    / @egidionetoe   Hey, don't forget to comment on the topics you'd like me to cover in future videos. Mark them with this 🎥 icon! Have you ever heard this term: so-and-so had a "stroke"? So, in this video, we'll discuss the main differences between the two types of strokes—cerebrovascular accidents and brain strokes. So, let's get to the heart of the word: "CEREBROVASCULAR ACCIDENT" (CVASCULAR ACCIDENT) is an accident that occurred in the vascularization of the brain. Is it serious? I don't know... comment here what you think. Look, when we talk about stroke, we have two main branches: ischemic stroke and hemorrhagic stroke. Are they different? From a clinical standpoint, they're quite similar. But when we talk about treatment, they're actually opposites. 1. ISCHEMIC STROKE: Generally speaking, it's something that obstructs an artery in the brain, and consequently, remember, a vessel carries blood that contains oxygen... so, you have a thrombus in a cerebral artery, and this is depriving your brain of oxygen. It's quickly entering stages of ischemia. 2. HEMORRHAGIC STROKE: Just look at the word, hemorrhage. There was a rupture of a vessel, causing bleeding in the brain. That's why there's a popular term for "so-and-so had a stroke." So, understand this: in one case, I'm blocking oxygen from reaching the brain (ischemic), in the other, the vessel ruptured and is bleeding profusely, but this blood isn't oxygenating; it's going outside the brain. In both cases, oxygen isn't reaching the brain. Wow, that's not good... our brain is left with no way to do anything. If you make a hasty diagnosis and treat it the opposite way... What do you mean? The patient had a hemorrhagic stroke, and you treat it as if it were ischemic. Wow, Wow... you just made the situation worse, if you didn't kill the patient. But wait, you'll understand why in this video. What do we do to differentiate? CT scan—wait, am I going to order a CT scan to make the diagnosis? NEGATIVE, I'll order it to rule out hemorrhage. Because if the patient arrives two hours without symptoms, there's no time for ischemia to appear yet, but if it's hemorrhagic, the blood shows up on the CT scan right away. So, understand that I order a CT scan to EXCLUDE hemorrhage, and if there's no hemorrhage, I treat it as an ischemic stroke. So the trick is the CT scan. If there's blood, I treat it as hemorrhagic; if there's no blood, I treat it as ischemic. IF YOU LIKE AND SHARE THIS, AND COMMENT THAT YOU WANT TO KNOW HOW TO TREAT EACH STROKE LIKE THIS, I'LL MAKE A VIDEO JUST ABOUT IT.