presentations Flashcards

1
Q

signs of upper motor neuron disease?

A

increased tone or spasticity
brisk reflexes
upgoing plantar responses

pyramial/corticospinal pattern of weakness -> weak extensors in arm + weak flexors in leg

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2
Q

signs of lower motor neuron disease?

A

muscle wasting
reduced tone
fasciculations (twitches)
reduced reflexes

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3
Q

signs of muscle disease?

A

wasting (usually proximal)
decreased tone
decreased or absent tendon reflexes

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4
Q

signs of neuromuscular junction disease?

A

fatiguable weakness
normal or decreased tone
normal reflexes
no sensory symptoms !

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5
Q

how would a hemispheric upper motor lesion present?

A

contralateral weakness in face, arm, leg

*think homunuculus

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6
Q

how would a parasagittal frontal lobe lesion upper motor lesion present?

A

paraparesis - partial paralysis of both legs

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7
Q

what does hemianaesthesia with no other signs suggest?

A

contralateral cerbral lesion

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8
Q

dissociated sensory loss

A

loss with lost spinothalamic (temperature/pain) but preserved dorsal column (vibration, light touch, proprioception) suggests hemicord damage

eg anterior spinal artery syndrome, brown-sequard syndrome

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9
Q

what is the difference between hyper / hypokinetic symptoms? dysfunction in what part of the brain causes this?

A

basal ganglia, extrapyramidal

hypo = rigidity, bradykinesia (slow movements) -> parkinsonism

hyper = spasms, involuntary movements(chorea), ticks

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10
Q

ataxia indicates damage to what part of the brain?

A

cerebellum

coordination, balance, speech, swallowing

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11
Q

signs of cerebellar dysfunction?

A

gait - broad based + unsteady
intention tremor, ataxia in arms (finger nose), legs (knee-heel)

dysdiadochokinesis - clumsy fast alternating movements
nystagmus
dysarthria - slurred speech

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12
Q

extrapyramidal / parkinsonism (motor symptoms)

A

bradykinesia
resting tremor
small shuffling gait

reduced arm swing
stooped posture

asymmetry in PD, symmetrical in drug induced or atypical

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13
Q

frontal lobe dysfunction presentation

A

personality dysfunction
contralateral weakness - deficit in primary cotex
paraparesis
paratonia
present grasp reflex
magnetic gait
seizures
incontinence
visual field defects - optic chiasm beneath frontal lobe
anosmia
wernickes dysphasia (u can speak but may not be grammatically correct) - damage to brocas area

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14
Q

temporal lobe dysfunction presentation

A

memory dysfunction - esp episodic
agnosia - inability to recognise or identify (visual/sensory)
language disorders - Wernickes
visual field defects - contralateral homonymous quadrantanopia
auditory dysfunction - Heschl’s gyrus
limbic dysfunction - depression

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15
Q

parietal lobe dysfunction presentation

A

visual field defect - contralateral inferior homonymous quadrantanopia
contralateral weakness + sensory loss - primary somatosensory
sensory problems - visual + sensory
dyspraxia
lack of attention
denial

dominant lobe affected = Gerstmanns syndrome - cant write, do maths, identify fingers, or tell left from right

non-dominant = neglect (no awareness o one side of the body) dressing apraxia

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16
Q

what is Gerstmanns syndrome? dysfunction to what part of the brain can cause this?

A
  1. agraphia - can’t write
  2. acalculia - can’t do math calculations
  3. finger agnosia - can’t name, discriminate or identify fingers
  4. left-right disorientation - can’t tell left from right

left parietal lobe in region of angular gyrus

17
Q

occipital lobe dysfunction presentation

A

contralateral homonymous hemianopia
visual hallucinations

18
Q

what visual deficit is seen in a parietal vs temporal lobe lesion?

A

temporal = contralateral superior quadrantopia

parietal = contralateral inferior quadrantopia

19
Q

how can you distinguish between dominant vs non-dominant parietal lobe dysfunction?

A

dominant lobe affected = Gerstmanns syndrome - cant write, do maths, identify fingers, or tell left from right

non-dominant = neglect (no awareness o one side of the body) dressing apraxia

(most people left dominant as right handed)