19 Neurological Flashcards

1
Q

When are all 5 divisions of facial nerve present in fetus

A

By 8th wk gestation

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2
Q

How does course of FN differ in adults and kids

A

At birth, FN is located superficially within poorly formed mastoid; with maturation, the nerve is displaced medially and inferiorly

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3
Q

When is myelination of individual axons of the facial nerve complete

A

age 4

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4
Q

What prognostic info does electroneurography (ENoG) provide for facial paralysis

A

Patients with 95% degeneration or greater have a 50% chance of unfavorable recovery; if at least 10% function is retained in the first 21 days of paralysis, 80–100% functional recovery is highly likely.

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5
Q

When is ENoG meaningful

A

Between days 3 and 21 (14) after complete loss of voluntary fnc

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6
Q

What is the next most accurate test when ENoG is unavailable

A

Maximal stimulation test

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7
Q

What test should be performed when 100% neural degeneration is recorded with ENoG

A

Voluntary EMG recording; regenerating nerve fibers conducting at different rates can result in an overestimation of neural degeneration on ENoG

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8
Q

What should be done if motor unit potentials are detected on EMG

A

No further rx is indicated

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9
Q

What EP test is more useful 3 wks after onset of complete facial paralysis

A

EMG

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10
Q

What test should be performed on AFro-Caribbean migrants with idiopathic faical nerve palsy

A

HTLV-1 antibody screen

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11
Q

What is incidence of cranial nerve palsy at initial presentation in pts with NP CA

A

12-18%

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12
Q

T/F: True diplopia should resolve with 1 eye closed

A

true

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13
Q

Small irregular pupils that react irregularly to light but better to accomodation suggests what ID?

A

Neurosyphillis

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14
Q

What is Myerson sign

A

Persistent blinking when the forehead is tapped repeatedly is an abnl manifestation of glabellar reflex, a primitive reflex seen in infants that may be a sign of frontal lobe dz in adults

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15
Q

Which cranial nerves are tested with corneal reflex?

A

V and VII IPSI

VII CONTRA

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16
Q

“When testing for dysarthria, problems with saying “Ka, Ka, Ka”; “La, La, La”; and “Me, Me, Me” indicate deficits in which nerves?

A

IX and X; XII; VII

17
Q

Winging of the scapula is seen w/ deficits in which nerve

A

XI