neuro 2 Flashcards

1
Q

MG treatment
(3)

A

temporary symptom relief
- long acting acetylcholinesterase inhibitor= Pyridostigmine (1st line)

myasthenic crisis (resp muscles)
- Plasmapheresis and IV immunoglobulin

immune suppression to prevent relapses
- prednisolone

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2
Q

cluster headache
- prophylaxis
- acute rescue

A

Verapamil

sumitriptan + oxygen

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3
Q

migraine
- prophylaxis
- acute rescue

A

propanolol / topirimate / riboflavin / triptan / acupuncture

triptan and NSAID/ paracetemol

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4
Q

stroke in Anterior cerebral artery ACA

A

Contralateral hemiparesis and sensory loss, lower extremity > upper

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5
Q

Stroke in middle cerebral artery MCA

A

Contralateral hemiparesis and sensory loss, upper extremity > lower

Contralateral homonymous hemianopia

aphasia

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6
Q

Stroke in posterior cerebral artery PCA

A

Contralateral homonymous hemianopia with macular sparing (central vision ok)

Visual agnosia (can’t recognise objects, faces fine)

+/- Webers syndrome (branch off PCA to midbrain)
- Ipsilateral CN III palsy
- Contralateral weakness of upper and lower extremity

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7
Q

basilar artery stroke

A

locked in syndrome

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8
Q

stroke in Posterior inferior cerebellar artery (lateral medullary syndrome, Wallenberg syndrome)

A

Ipsilateral: facial pain and temperature loss
Contralateral: limb/torso pain and temperature loss
Ataxia, nystagmus

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9
Q

stroke in Anterior inferior cerebellar artery (lateral pontine syndrome)

A

Ipsilateral: facial pain and temperature loss
Contralateral: limb/torso pain and temperature loss
Ataxia, nystagmus

Ipsilateral: facial paralysis and deafness

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9
Q

how to distinguish idiopathic vs iatrogenic PD

A

idiopathic - asymmetrical
iatrogenic - symmetrical

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10
Q

suspected TIA
- what next

A

aspirin 300mg asap
(unless already on asprin low dose, just continue, if patient has a bleeding disorder/ is taking an anticoagulant)

if patient has bleeding disorder/ is taking an anticoagulant –> urgent CT to exclude haemorrhage

referal to TIA clinic
(because TIA is imaging based, not time based, all need scan/ follow up)
- within 24h if suspected TIA in last week
- within 7d if suspected TIA over a week ago

if crescendo TIA (more than 1) –> urgent admission and specialist review

possible carotid doppler/ ECG later on

long term - clopidogrel 1st line. (aspirin + dipyridamole if not)

carotid endartectomy if 70% carotid stenosis and not severly disabled

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11
Q

lacunar infarct

A

1 of the following:

  1. unilateral weakness (and/or sensory deficit) of face and arm, arm and leg or all three.
  2. pure sensory stroke.
  3. ataxic hemiparesis
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12
Q

total anterior circulation infarct

partical anterior circulation infarct

A

anterior and middle cerebral arteries

(Total) - 3 of

  1. unilateral hemiparesis and/or hemisensory loss of the face, arm & leg
  2. homonymous hemianopia
  3. higher cognitive dysfunction e.g. dysphasia

2 of them (partial)

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13
Q

posterior circulation infarct

A

vertebrobasilar arteries

1 of

  1. cerebellar or brainstem syndromes
  2. loss of consciousness
  3. isolated homonymous hemianopia
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14
Q

alcohol withdrawal timeframe
- symtpoms
- seizures
- delerium tremens

A
  • symtpoms 6-12h
  • seizures 36h
  • delerium tremens 72h
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15
Q

A painful 3rd nerve palsy is what until proven otherwise

A

posterior communicating artery aneurysm

would also give meningism

16
Q

pontine stroke

A

reduced GCS,
paralysis- often all limbs
bilateral pin point pupils (miosis)
absent horizontal eye mvmts

17
Q

normal pressure hydrocephalus

  • triad
  • imaging
A

urinary incontinence
gait issue/ ataxia
declining cognition

wobbly, whacky, wet

ventricles englarged, without or not proportionate to sulcal enlargement

18
Q

ramsay hunt syndrome
- cause
- features
- tx

A

VZV in CN7

like bells palsy but also ear pain/ hearing symptoms (vertigo, tinnitus)/ ear rash

tx: steroids and aciclovir

19
Q

what type of stroke is fluctuating conciousness/ confusion typical of

A

subdural

20
Q

korsakoff triad
wernickes triad

A

korsakoff
1. confabulation
2. anterograde amnesia
3. retrogreade amnesia

wernickes
1. encephalopathy (confusion)
2. ataxia
3. opthalmoplegia ( nystagmus, eye palsy)

21
Q

prolactinoma triad

A

headaches
amenorrhea
visual defects

22
Q

labyrinthitis vs vestibular neuronitis

A

both
- vertigo
- n/v
- recent infection

labyrinthitis
- hearing loss
- tinnitus

vestibular neuronitis
- nystagmus