Neurology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the motor functions of the median nerve?

A

Thumb flexion and opposition
Digits 2 + 3 flexion
Wrist flexion and abduction
Forearm pronation

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2
Q

What are the motor functions of the ulnar nerve?

A

Thumb + finger abduction
finger adduction
Digits 4-5 flexion
Wrist flexion and adduction

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3
Q

What are the motor functions of the radial nerve?
What are the 4 sensory branches?

A

Extension - elbow, wrist, PIPs
Forearm supination
Thumb abduction (posterior interosseus nerve)

Lower lateral cutaneous nerve of arm
Posterior cutaneous nerve of arm
Posterior cutaneous nerve of forarm
Superficial branch (dorsal digital nerves)

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4
Q

What are the motor functions of the axillary nerve?

A

Shoulder abduction of arm beyond first 15 degrees

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5
Q

What are the motor functions of the musculocutaneous nerve?
What is the sensory branch called?

A

Elbow flexion
Forearm supination

Lateral cutaneous nerve of forearm

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6
Q

What are the motor functions of the femoral nerve?
What are the sensory branches?

A

Hip flexion
Knee extension

Femoral nerve - anterior thigh
Sapehenous nerve - medial calf/foot

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7
Q

What is the motor function of the obturator nerve?
Where is the sensory innervation?

A

Hip adduction

Proximal medial thigh

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8
Q

What are the branches of the sciatic nerve? What are there motor and sensory function?

A

Common peroneal:
Superficial peroneal - foot eversion; lateral foot + calf
Deep peronal - foot DF, toe extension; patch between toes 1 and 2

Tibial nerve: foot PF, inversion, toe flexion; lateral aspect of foot

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9
Q

What nerves are branches of the lumbar plexus?
What nerves are branches of the sacral plexus?

A

Lumbar - femoral, obtural, lateral femoral cutaneous nerve (sensation to lateral thigh)

Sacral - sciatic nerve, posterior femoral cutaneous nerve (posterior thigh sensation)

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10
Q

What feature differentiates ulnar neuropathy at the wrist from ulnar neuropathy at the elbow?

A

Both will cause cause motor weakness with clawing of digits 4 + 5

Compression at the elbow cause sensory loss of both dorsal + palmar ulnar surfaces however at the wrist sensory loss will be limited to palm + digits 3 + 4

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11
Q

List the genes associated with early onset dementia

Which gene is associated with late onset dementia. What chromosome?

A

Early onset AD:
- APP gene (amylid precursor protein)
- PSEN 1/2

Also trisomy 21

Late onset AD:
- APOE4 (homozygous). Chromosome 19.

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12
Q

Gene affected in CADASIL

A

NOTCH3 gene pathogenic variant (ch. 19)

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13
Q

Upper trunk plexopathy
- signs
- spinal levels

A

C5,C6

  • loss of shoulder movements and elbow flexion
  • sensory loss over lateral aspect of arm AND forearm
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14
Q

Lower trunk plexopathy
- signs
- spinal levels

A

C8, T1
- Claw hand
- Horners
- senosry loss of ulnar side of hand AND forearm

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15
Q

Foot drop with absent ankle jerk.
Where is the lesion?

A

Sciatic neuropathy.

NOTE - peroneal nerve often more affected than tibial; may have sparing of PF despite weak AJ

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16
Q

Which antibiotic significantly reduces therapeutic levels of valproate?

A

Carbapenems

17
Q

Which nerve root supplies brachioradialis reflex?

A

C5, C6

18
Q

Which 2 conditions are Anti-GAD65 antibodies associated with?

A

Stiff person syndrome
T1DM

19
Q

List the alpha synucleinopathies

A

MSA
Parkinsons disease
Lewy body dementia

20
Q

Signs of gerstmanns syndrome

Where is the lesion?

A

Dominant (left) inferior parietal lobe (left angular gyrus)

Acalculia - can’t do math
Agraphia - can’t write
Agnosia (of the fingers) - can’t name fingers
Right-left disorientation

21
Q

Key features of Parinauds syndrome

Where is the lesion?

A

Dorsal midrain lesion
Commonly caused by pineal tumors, hydrocephalus

Results in:
- dilated pupils sluggishly responsive to light (EWN)
- impaired upgaze (dorsal vertical centre)
- convergance-retraction nystagmus
- retracted eye lids (sub-oculomotor nucelus)
- intact accomodation

22
Q

Ipsilateral CNIII palsy
Contralateral hemiataxia

Where is the lesion? What is this syndrome?

A

Claude sundrome

Dorsomedial midbrain (PCA and baslar branches)

23
Q

Poor prognostic features in bells

A

severe (complete) paralysis - MAJOR prognostic factor
older age; patients with moderately severe dysfunction should have valaciclovir + steroids

Other poor features - hyperacusis, altered taste, electromyographic evidence of axonal degeneration.

24
Q

Pure motor stroke (hemiparesis) - where is the lesion?

A

Posterior limb of internal capsule

25
Q

EEG findings in alzheimers dementia

A

Frontal slowing
Increased delta and theta activity
Decreased alpha and beta activity

26
Q

EEG in depression

A

Frontal alpa asymmetry
No slowing (unlike in dementia)

27
Q

Mechanism of Atogepant and indication

A

CGRP antagonist (calcitonin gene related pepetide)

Used in migraine

28
Q

Treatment of JME.
What AED exacerbates it?

A

Valproate

Exacerbated by lamotrogine

29
Q

Two parkinsons plus syndromes that are tauopathies

A

PSP
Corticobasal degeneration

30
Q

Knee jerk reflex spinal cord level, muscle and nerve

A

L2, 3, 4
Quardriceps
Femoral

31
Q

Ankle jerk reflex spinal cord level, muscle and nerve

A

S1-2
Tibial nerve (branch of sciatic)
Triceps surae

32
Q

Triceps jerk reflex spinal cord level, muscle and nerve

A

C7
Radial nerve
Triceps muscle

33
Q

Biceps jerk reflex spinal cord level, muscle and nerve

A

C5/6
Biceps
Musculocutaneous

34
Q

L) facial weakness
L) abducens weakness
R) hemiplegia

Where is the lesion?

A

Left ventral pons - “Millard-Gubler syndrome”

Affecting CNVI/VIII + corticospinal tracts

Basily artery