Clinical 13: Peripheral Neurovascular exam Flashcards

1
Q

What is a good way to remember what to do in a peripheral neurovascular exam?

A

I Saw Two People Riding Camels Slowly
Inspection, Special Tests, Tone, Power, Reflexes, Co-ordination, Sensation (light, pain, proprio and vibration)

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2
Q

What should you look for in general inspection of a patients are the starts of a peripheral nerve examination?

A

Facial expression, alterness
Loss of muscle bulk
Fasciluations
Abnormal movements
Tremor.

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3
Q

What special tests are performed in the upper limb part of the PNE?

A

Hold arms out straight, eyes shut:
Check for psueodarthiritis with palms down, protonartor drift with palms up
Rebound : push arm down, watch for overcompensation

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4
Q

What special tests should be perfomed in the lower limb part of the PNA?

A

Gat - normal, heel-toe, tiptoes, heel-walking
Rombergs test - proprioceptive loss (feet together close eyes, stand still, support with hand on either side)

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5
Q

What are the different types of patholigical tone in the PNE?

A

Hypotonic
Hypertonic
Claps knife spacticity - increased tone associated with UMNL
Lead pipe rigidity - hypteronia associated with Parkinsons disease
Cogwheel rigidity = a combination of led pipe rigidity and superimposed tremor.

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6
Q

What is tested for tone in the lower limb PNE?

A

Pastry roll
Heel flick / leg lift
Clonus (<5 beats is abnormal)

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7
Q

What scale should power be graded against?
What are the different grades?

A

0-5 on the MRC scale
0 - no contraction
1 - flicker of contraction
2 - active movement with gravity eliminated
3 - active movement against gravity
4 - active movement against gravity and resistance
5 - normal power.

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8
Q

What different motions should be tested for power in the upper limb?

A

Shoulder - abduction and adduction
Elbow - flexion and extension
Wrist - flexion and extension
Fingers - abduction, adduction and extension
Thumb abduction

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9
Q

What different movements for power should be tested in the lower limb exam in PNE?

A

Hip - flexion and extension
Knee - flexion and extension
Ankle - dorsiflexion and plantar flexion, inversion and eversion
Big toe dorsiflexion

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10
Q

What reflexes are tested in the upper limb?
What are the associated nerve routes?

A

Biceps jerk = C5,6
Triceps jerk = C7
Supinator (brachioradialis) = C6
(Finger jerk = C8) - occurs during biceps or supinator

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11
Q

What are the different reflexes tested in the lower limb neurovascular exam?
What are the associated nerve routes?

A

Adductor reflex: L3
Knee jerk : L3,L4
Ankle jerk: S1,S2
Plantar reflex : S1,S2.

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12
Q

How do you test coordination in the upper limb?

A

Finger-nose test (Vary the target)
Rapid alternating movement (slappy hands)

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13
Q

How do you test co-ordination in the lower limb examination?

A

Heel-shin test
Tap feet against my hands as fast as possible.

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14
Q

How do you assess sensation in the upper/lower limb?

A

Test each dermatomes for:
Light touch - cotton wool
Pin-prick - neurotip
Vibration - tuning fork
Proprioception - moving distal phalanx up/down

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15
Q

What notation is used to classify the different tendon reflexes?

A

+++ hyperactive
++ normal
+ sluggish
± only with reinforcement
- absent

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16
Q

What are the key signs of an upper motor neuron lesion as different stages of the PNE?

A

I - pronator drift
T - spasticity (clasp knife), clonus
P - weakness
R - brisk, extensor plantar response (+ Babinski sign)

17
Q

What are the key signs of a lower motor neuron lesion on a PNE?

A

I - wasting, fasciculations
T - decreased, absent clonus
P - weakness
R - reduced, down-going plantars.

18
Q

What are the different signs of cerebellar dysfunction?

A

DANISH
Dysdiadochokinesis - impaired rapid alternating movements.
Ataxia - wide based gait, exacerbated by heel to toe
Nystagmus - rapid alternating eye movements
Intention tremor - touch my fingertip
Staccato speech - say canada goose.
Hypotonia - acute cerebellar damage.

19
Q

What are the different dermatomes in the upper arm?

A
20
Q

What are the different dermatomes in the lower limb?

A

Go down the inner leg one above knee, knee, below knee, big toe, then the heal on the outside.