new material for Final Flashcards

1
Q

Progressive loss of mental and physical functions caused by invasion of Treponema pallidum into the CNS:

A

neurosyphilis

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2
Q

Neurosyphilis - 4 chief manifestations:

A
  • asx neurosyphilis
  • meningovascular syphilis
  • paretic syphilis
  • tabes dorsalis
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3
Q

Meningovascular syphilis:

A

characterized by perivascular inflammation in the brain

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4
Q

Paretic syphilis:

A

result of widespread parenchymal invasion by spirochetes and resultant inflammatory changes that cause individual brain cell death and brain atrophy

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5
Q

Tabes dorsalis:

A
  • slowly progressive degenerative form of syphilis involving the posterior columns and posterior roots,
  • results in damage to sensory nerves in dorsal roots
  • produces ataxia, loss of pain sensation/proprioception
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6
Q

MC presentation of meningovascular syphilis:

A

Stroke syndrome in a relatively young adult, involving the middle cerebral artery or branches of the basilar artery; freq involves base of brain and may result in cranial nerve palsies

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7
Q

Paretic syphilis usu occurs how long after exposure?

A

20-30 yrs as a result of progressive meningoencephalitis, resultant ongoing loss of cortical function

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8
Q

Paretic syphilis is characterized by:

A
  • tissue invasion with spirochetes
  • chronic perivascular and meningeal inflammatory changes
  • meningeal fibrosis
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9
Q

MC sx of paretic syphilis:

A
  • personality change (33%)
  • ataxia (28%)
  • stroke (23%)
  • ophthalmic sx (17%)
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10
Q

Neurosyphilis often results in the formation of meningeal granulomas, called:

A

gummas - well-circumscribed, non-cancerous mass of granulation tissue resulting from a cell-mediated immune response to Treponema, tertiary stages.

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11
Q

Gummas are MC found in:

A

LIVER

also found in brain/dura, heart, skin, bone, testes

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12
Q

Several hours after tx of early stage syphilis, pts may undergo febrile reaction called:

A

Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction

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13
Q

Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) is caused by:

A

JC virus (polyomavirus family)

rare, progressive, demyelinating dz -> loss of oligodendrocytes

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14
Q

Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a rare complication of _______ that can develop from ____ years after the initial infx.

A

measles (rubeola)

1 to 20+

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15
Q

The only change in the CSF profile of SSPE is a marked elevation in a specially ordered CSF immunoglobulin:

A

Rubeola IgG Antibody

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16
Q

Poliovirus is an RNA virus that is transmitted:

A
  • through the oral-fecal route

* ingestion of contaminated water

17
Q

After a period of viremia, poliovirus becomes ________ and produces destruction of the motor neurons in the anterior horn and brainstem, leading to ____________.

A

neurotropic

flaccid paralysis

18
Q

Zoonotic dz that is transmitted via saliva of animals:

A

Rabies virus

  • severe HA
  • irritability
  • muscle spasm
  • inc saliva production
  • hydrophobia
19
Q

Diagnostic finding for rabies:

A

Negri bodies - round/oval inclusion bodies

100% diagnostic, found in 20% of cases

20
Q

Complicated syndrome of different nervous system and mental status symptoms, frequency inc with advancing effects of HIV disease, particularly as CD4+ cell counts decrease:

A

AIDS dementia complex (ADC)

21
Q

Unusual, often fatal, two-phase encephalopathy characterized by fever, vomiting, fatty infiltration of the liver and swelling of the kidneys and brain:

A

Reye’s syndrome

  • post-viral (VZV)
  • NOT contagious
  • assoc w/aspirin use
22
Q

An infx of the brain d/t infx by a prion:

A

Spongiform encephalopathy

  • Kuru
  • CJD
23
Q

Related spongiform encephalopathies that are invariably fatal brain diseases with unusually long incubation periods measured in years:

A

mad cow dz (BSE)

variant Creutzfeld-Jakob dz (vCJD)

24
Q

Most prevalent neurologic disorder in terms of morbidity and mortality:

A

cerebrovascular dz - 3rd leading cause of death in US (particularly stroke)

25
Q

3 major categories of cerebrovascular dz:

A
  • thrombotic
  • embolic
  • hemorrhagic
26
Q

From a pathophys standpoint, consider cerebrovascular disease as representing two processes:

A
  • hypoxia, ischemia, infarction from impaired blood supply and oxygenation of CNS tissue
  • hemorrhage from rupture of vessels in the CNS
27
Q

Cerebral infarction (aka stroke) is characterized by:

A

sudden loss of circulation to an area of the brain which results in loss of neurologic function corresponding to the part of brain involved.
Leading cause of major disability in US

28
Q

If you think I’m gonna get to the end of CNS…

A

you’ve got another thing coming! sorry kids.