Stroke: Oxfordshire community stroke project

Oxfordshire community stroke project (OCSP) cerebral infarction classification. Classification is based on clinical features and confirmed after CT excludes haemorrhage.

Classification

TACI – total anterior circulation infarct

Triad of:

  • Contralateral hemiparesis (and/or hemisensory loss), affecting face, arm, and leg
  • Higher cortical dysfunction, e.g. dysphasia or visuospatial disturbance (neglect)
  • Homonymous hemianopia

If the patient is confused or untestable, the latter two signs are typically assumed.

PACI – partial anterior circulation infarct

  • Two features of TACI only
  • Isolated higher cortical dysfunction (e.g. dysphasia or visuospatial disturbance)
  • Limited motor or sensory deficit (e.g. confined to one limb or face/hand)

LACI – lacunar infarct

Four classical subtypes:

  1. Pure motor stroke (face, arm, leg) — most common
  2. Pure sensory stroke
  3. Sensorimotor stroke
  4. Ataxic hemiparesis

POCI – posterior circulation infarct

  1. Brainstem signs ± isolated homonymous hemianopia:
    • Ipsilateral cranial nerve with contralateral motor/sensory deficit
    • Bilateral motor/sensory signs
    • Conjugate eye movement disorder
    • Coma (especially basilar artery occlusion)
  2. Cerebellar signs:
    • Without associated ipsilateral hemiparesis/sensory signs
  3. Isolated homonymous hemianopia
Anatomical locations
SubtypeLikely Vascular TerritoryCommon Aetiology
TACIProximal MCA ± ACA or ICAEmbolism from heart or proximal arteries
PACISmaller MCA > ACA infarctsSame as TACI
LACIDeep perforator vessels (basal ganglia, pons)Small vessel disease
POCIPosterior cerebrum, brainstem, cerebellumEmbolism or thrombosis of large/small vessels
Relative prognosis
SubtypePrognosis
TACIPoor — high risk of long-term dependency or death
PACIIntermediate — better than TACI, but recurrence risk is high
LACIGood — often clinically silent, underdiagnosed, frequent incidental MRI/CT findings
POCIHighly variable — from mild deficits to death

References

Publications

FOAMed

Fellowship Notes

MBBS DDU (Emergency) CCPU. Adult/Paediatric Emergency Medicine Advanced Trainee in Melbourne, Australia. Special interests in diagnostic and procedural ultrasound, medical education, and ECG interpretation. Co-creator of the LITFL ECG Library. Twitter: @rob_buttner

Dr James Hayes LITFL author

Educator, magister, munus exemplar, dicata in agro subitis medicina et discrimine cura | FFS |

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