Neurological weakness Flashcards

1
Q

What can lower motor neurone disorders cause?

A
Weakness, wasting, reduced muscle tone, visible spontaneous contractions (fasciculations).
peripheral neuropathy (e.g., diabetes, B12); specifically of facial nerve: Bell’s palsy (affects whole side of face).
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2
Q

What can upper motor neurone disorders cause?

A

Weakness, no wasting, increased muscle tone, no fasciculations. eg. stroke, multiple sclerosis, tumour

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3
Q

Does the duration of the weakness give any clues as to the pathology?

A
minutes-hours = vascular
days-weeks = inflammation/infection
weeks-months = tumour
months-years = degeneration
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4
Q

What are the neurological tests you can do to test if muscles are working (as cranial nerves control these and give an idea to neurological capacity)

A

-face,mouth, VII–facial nerve. Test=smile
- jaw, chewing, V-trigeminal nerve. Test =open your mouth
- tongue, XII hypoglossal nerve. Test: stick out your tongue (it will point to your weak side)
- swallowing, X - vagus. Test: swallow, cough, “aah” (uvula points away from weak side)
[IX - glossopharyngeal] Test: can you feel this?

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5
Q

What is bulbar palsy?

A

bilateral impairment of function of cranial nerves V, VII, X and XI due to LOWER motor neuron lesion in the medulla
(or bilateral lesions of lower cranial nerves outside brainstem).
Symptoms – dysphagia (difficulty in swallowing), difficulty chewing,
nasal regurgitation, dysarthria (slurring of speech), choking on liquids
Signs – nasal speech (lacking in modulation and difficulty with all consonants), tongue atrophy with fasciculations, dribbling of saliva, weakness of soft palate (ask the patient to say “aah”)

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6
Q

What is Pseudobulbar palsy?

A

bilateral impairment of function of cranial nerves V, VII, X and XI due to UPPER motor neuron lesion affecting the cortical pathways to the medulla.
Symptoms – dysphagia, dysarthria, difficulty chewing, choking
+ labile affect, uncontrollable laughing or crying Signs – speech is slow, thick and indistinct, tongue is small & stiff.

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7
Q

What’s a neuromuscular disease?

A

Myasthenia gravis

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8
Q

What’s a muscular disease?

A

muscular dystrophy

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9
Q

What are the symptoms and signs of raised intracranial pressure?

A

 symptoms: nausea, headache
 General signs: vomitting, possible ↓GCS  Signs relating to BP:
bradycardia, increased systolic BP widened pulse pressure
 Others: Cheyne-Stokes breathing, papilloedema, dilated pupil/pupils

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10
Q

What can cause raised intracranial pressure?

A

 Brain parenchyma  Interstitial fluid  Meninges  CSF

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11
Q

What are the consequences of raised intracranial pressure?

A
  1. Coning: Brainstem compression:
    Damage to vital respiratory and cardiac centres, can be fatal
  2. Extradural haematoma
  3. Subarachnoid haemorrhage
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12
Q

What’s a stroke?

A

Sudden onset neurological signs / symptoms
Last for >24 hours
Due to a vascular cause 85% infarction (embolism / thrombosis) 15% haemorrhage

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13
Q

What are the sources of emboli for a cerebral infarction?

A

Left atrium
Mural thrombus
Cardiac valves
Atherosclerosis (aorta and carotid)

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