Clinical Review Flashcards

1
Q

What is Bell’s Palsy?

A

Lower motor neuron disorder of CN VII

Facial paralysis, Drooling (buccinator) Inability to close eye

Loss of taste to anterior tongue, pain in or behind ear, hyperacousia

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2
Q

What can result from paralysis of the orbicularis oculi?

A

Patient is unable to close eye, which can result in damage to the cornea

In newborns, the eyelid can be sewn shut to prevent corneal damage

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3
Q

What results from paralysis of the buccinator muscle?

A

Patient is unable to hold food between teeth

Dificulty chewing, drooling

Cause is facial paralysis

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4
Q

Why does damage to VII result in hyperacousia?

A

Paralysis of the stapedius

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5
Q

How can infection spread from the face to the vein?

A

Low pressure and no valves in the venous system of the face

Facial and ophthalmic veins have extensive anastomoses

Ophthalmic veins drain to cavernous sinus

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6
Q

What is the clinical sign of a facial infection that spread to the brain?

A

Diplopia

*Infections lateral to the nose are particularly dangerous due to pterygoid venous plexus

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7
Q

What is cleft lip?

A

Failure of fusion of medial nasal process and maxillary process at the philtrum of the lip

Can be unilateral or bilateral and occur in combination with cleft palate

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8
Q

What part of the skull is a common place for fractures and what joint does in affect?

A

Zygomatic arch

Temporo-mandibular joint

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9
Q

What layer of the scalp can infection spread through?

A

Loose areolar tissue that is deep to the epicranial aponeurosis

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10
Q

Tumors in the orbit can also affect what cavity?

A

Nasal cavity

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11
Q

What is an obstructed nasolacrimal duct?

A

Failure of the duct to canalize during development

Can be opened surgically

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12
Q

What is a stye or horde’olum?

A

Obstruction or infection of the sebaceous gland in the subcutaneous layer of the eyelid

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13
Q

What is a chalazion?

A

Obstruction of a tarsal gland in the eyelid

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14
Q

What would cause an inability to produce tears?

A

Damage to the facial nerve

VII innervates the lacrimal gland via the pterygopalatine ganglion

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15
Q

What results from damage to the abducens nerve?

A

Medial strabismus due to paralysis of the lateral rectus

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16
Q

What results from damage to the trochlear nerve?

A

Patient cannot look down and out, causes difficulty walking down stairs

Eye is rotated laterally, patient tilts head to the opposite side

Normal eye ends up being rotated medially to compensate for the head tilt

17
Q

What results from oculomotor nerve damage?

A

Lateral strabismus - medial rectus paralysis

Ptosis - paralysis of the levator palpabrae superioris

Mydriasis (dilated pupil) - pupillary constrictor paralysis

18
Q

What occurs with damage to the short ciliary nerves?

A

Mydriasis

19
Q

What is horner’s syndrome?

A

Lesions of the sympathetic nervous system

Symptoms: Miosis (pupillary constriction)
Ptosis (drooping eyelid)
Anhydrosis (lack of sweating)

20
Q

What is torticollis?

A

Contracture of the sternocleidomastoid

Face turns to the opposite side

21
Q

How do you test for accessory nerve damage?

A

Shrug shoulders

22
Q

What is a retropharyngeal abscess?

A

Can be difficult to diagnose due to no external swelling; life-threatening as abscess can block airway

23
Q

What is otitis media?

A

Middle ear infection that is common in children

Spreading of infection from respiratory system can damage auditory ossicles

24
Q

Why can you lose taste if the tympanic membrane is pireced?

A

The chorda tympani crosses the middle ear

Branch of VII that provides taste sensation to the anterior 2/3 of the tongue

25
Q

What can result from damage to the recurrent laryngeal nerve?

A

Paralysis of all laryngeal muscles on one side except the cricothyroid

Permanent hoarse voice

26
Q

Why will anaphylactic shock cause suffocation?

A

The Deep cervical nodes lie above and below the vocal folds and the mucosa is tightly attached to the vocal folds

Anaphylactic shock will cause swelling of the vestibular folds

27
Q

What is the procedure to restore air flow during anaphylactic shock?

A

Cricothyrotomy - insert a tube through the cricothyroid membrane

Will cause less bleeding than a tracheotomy

28
Q

What are the two places that food (popcorn) can get stuck and feel like choking?

A

Vallecula in the oropharynx

Piriform recess in the laryngopharynx