General NSx Flashcards

1
Q

What examination findings are consistent with cauda equina?

A
  • Saddle anaesthesia (S2-4)
  • Urinary retention
  • Faecal incontinence/lack of anal tone on exam
  • Bilateral lower limb weakness
  • Bilateral paraesthesia
  • LL hyporeflexia
  • Absent bulbocavernosus reflex
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2
Q

What should you document/look for with a spinal cord injury exam?

A

Motor weakness level
Sensory loss types and level
Evidence of sacral sparing (bulbocavernosus reflex, anal tone and sensation)
Signs of spinal shock (areflexia, priapism)

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3
Q

When does a Hangmans fracture actually occur with Hangings?

A

If the drop is greater than the persons height and the knot is put in front of the chin

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4
Q

How does the SAH Fisher grading scale work?

A

The most well known and used system, purely radiological and also used to predict risk of vasospasm

Grade I - No SAH visualised (but still present), vasospasm risk 21%
Grade II - thin <1mm SAH with no clots, risk 25%
Grade III - Localised clots and/or thicker SAH >1mm, risk 37%
Grade IV - IVH or ICH present, risk 31%

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5
Q

How does the SAH WFNS (World federation of neurological societies) grading scale work?

A

The most well known clinical based scale

Grade I - GCS 15, no motor deficit
Grade II - 13-14, no motor deficit
Grade III - 13-14, motor deficit
Grade IV - 7-12
Grade V - 3-6

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6
Q

What are the main complications with VP shunts?

A

Obstruction
- 75%
- Kinking, disconnection, migration
- Valve defect
- Clogging from debris

Infection
- 15%
- S. epidermidis most common
- Also S. aures, E. coli, Corynbacterium

Overdrainage
- 5%
- Slit ventricle, low ICP

Intracranial bleed
- Local irritation
- Most common is SDH

Abdominal issues
- Bowel perforation
- Migration into other structures including the pelvis/scrotum

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7
Q

What is the mortality and morbidity of haemorrhagic stroke?

A
  • 30% of patients die
  • rises to 80% if warfarinised
  • Most deaths occur in the first 48hrs
  • The likeliness of discharge to home is 33%
  • Only 30% of patients survive the 1st year
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8
Q

Which ICH’s are amenable to surgery?

A
  • Cerebellar haemorrhages >3cm
  • Haemorrhages within 1cm of the cerebral surface, but not commonly done
  • If >1cm from the cerebral surface then tend to do worse from surgery
  • IVH is associated with much higher rates of mortality from obstructive hydrocephalus
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9
Q

What are the risk factors for ICH?

A
  • Excess ETOH
  • HTN (specifically DBP >95mmHg)
  • Men 2:1 women
  • 10-15% of all strokes
  • More common in Asians
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10
Q

What are the risk factors for SAH?

A
  • Previous SAH (biggest risk)
  • PCKD
  • Smoking (3-10x)
  • HTN
  • 1st or 2nd degree relative (4x)
  • Being female
  • Amphetamine use
  • Connective tissue disorders ie Marfans, Ehlers-Danlos
  • Alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency
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11
Q

What are the general features of aneurysms?

A
  • Larger aneurysms grow faster than smaller ones
  • Risk begins to increase when >7mm
  • The most commonly affected site is the anterior COW
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12
Q

In a patient with a C-spine injury, what does paradoxical abdominal breathing suggest?

A
  • Loss of intercostal muscles but at least partial sparing of the diaphragm
  • Thus the lesion must be below C3 as if it was at C3 or above the diaphragm would be lost as well
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13
Q

What are the highest risk sites in the spine for injury?

A

Junctions
- C7-T1, T12-L1, L5-S1
Congenital fusions
Surgical/Inflammatory fusions
Any area with known structural abnormalities (ie lytic mets)

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14
Q

What are the typical and atypical presentations of central cord syndrome?

A
  • Typically cause by hyperextension injury to neck in the elderly
  • Upper limb weakness > lower limb weakness, bladder dysfunction and paraesthesias (upper > lower)
  • Less common variant is from central cord pathology such as slow growing intramedullary tumours and syringomyelia
  • Loss of pain/temp sensation at the site of lesion and just around it
  • Levels above and below are typically spared
  • Get hyporeflexia at these levels
  • Overall the prognosis is good
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15
Q

What causes spinal shock?

A
  • After an acute injury there is loss of all spinal cord function caudal to the lesion (may spare the sacral region)
  • This can occur in the absence of any MRI finding of spinal cord damage
  • Thought to be due to acute neuronal dysfunction from potassium leak from the cells
  • As the potassium corrects itself the symptoms variably improve
  • This transient state is highly variable and can last hours to weeks
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16
Q

What is the most common site of spinal cord injury in younger kids?

A

High C-spine injury C1-3
Due to the relatively large head size of children
These injuries are often fatal

17
Q

What is SCIWORA?

A

Spinal Cord Injury Without Obvious Radiological Abnormality
- Absence of pathology on CT and Xray
- Occurs in younger children
- Due to ligamentous laxity
- Usually has poor outcomes as affects the upper C-spine C1-3
- Diagnosed with MRI

18
Q

How does dorsal (posterior) cord syndrome present?

A

Dorsal columns
- Ataxia, loss of proprioception and paraesthesias

Corticospinal tracts
- Weakness, urinary incontinence

Causes
- MS, tabes dorsalis, Friedrich ataxia, atlantoaxial subluxation, tumours and AVM’s
- Subcacute combined degeneration

19
Q

What are the general neuroprotective strategies post traumatic brain injury/ICH?

A
  • Elevate head to 30 degrees
  • Avoid tight tapes/ties
  • CPP >60 but avoid hypertension ie <160 SBP and <110 DBP
  • Adequate sedation/analgesia titrated to HR/BP/Tearing
  • Aim sats 92-95, avoid hypo and hyperoxia
  • Aim sodium 145-150, prevent hyponatraemia
  • Low normal ETCO2 35-40
  • Normothermia, normoglycaemia
  • IDC, NG
  • +/- Nimodipine 60mg NG Q4hr
20
Q

At what rate should BP be lowered in in hypertensive encephalopathy?

A
  • 10-20% within 60mins
  • No more than 25% in the first 24hrs
  • For ICH aim BP 120-140 if initial SBP <220, if >220 then aim 140-160
21
Q

What blood pressure lowering meds are relatively contraindicated in SAH aneurysmal bleeding?

A

GTN and SNP
Can cause cerebral vasodilation potentially worsening both bleeding and ICP

22
Q

What are the causes of an isolated area of altered sensory function (ie L) upper limb numbness)?

A

Central
- Stroke/TIA
- Tumour
- AVM/Aneurysm
- MS
- Has to effect the pre-central gyrus or cortical tracts
- Syringomyelia
-

Peripheral
- Demyelination (MS, GBS)
- Infections (Leprosy, lyme, HIV, HSV, VZV, TB)
- Toxins (mercury, platinum, lead)
- Trauma (Norve root or peripheral plexus/nerve compression)
- Vascular (PVD, vasculitis, Raynauds)

23
Q

What measures can be done to lower ICP in an awake patient?

A
  • Mannitol and HTS
  • Analgesia
  • Antiemetics
  • Head up to 30 degrees
  • Tap shunt if VP shunt in situ
24
Q

What are the potential non-traumatic causes of acute spinal cord compression and what are their risk factors?

A

Iatrogenic
- Recent spinal procedure (ie LP)
- Bleeding diathesis