Formative Flashcards

1
Q

How would the patient present with an expanding tumour around the spinal cord in T5-T7 region?

A

Would expand to affect where STT neurones are decussating across the anterior white commissure, but not affect ascending/descending neurones = bilateral loss of pain and temp sensation in T5-T7 segments only

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2
Q

When is Thiamine given?

A

Alcohol dependence (usually Thiamine, B1 deficient)

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3
Q

How would the pupils change with a lesion in the midbrain, pons or medulla?

A

Pons and medulla lesions would affect sympathetic outflow = pin point pupils

Midbrain lesion affects EWN = dilated pupils

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4
Q

What’s the hierarchy of evidence ?

A
Systematic reviews
RCTs
Cohort
Case
Cross sectional studies
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5
Q

Which area of basal ganglia generates tremors?

A

Globus pallidus

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6
Q

Which area of the ganglia is associated with hemiballismus?

A

Subthalamic nucleus

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7
Q

What type of movements does damage to the striatum cause (HD)?

A

Chorea and athetosis

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8
Q

What are signs of cerebellar damage?

A
DANISH
Dysdiadochokinesia
Dysmetria (pass pointing)
Dystonia (hypotonia)
Dysarthria (difficulty articulating speech)
Dysphagia (problems with swallowing)
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9
Q

What’s the role of the suprachiasmatic nucleus?

A

Diurnal rhythm

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10
Q

What’s the role of the supraoptic nucleus?

A

Osmoregulation

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11
Q

What’s the role of the paraventricular nucleus?

A

ANS - stress, appetite

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12
Q

In a CSF sample when would lymphocytes or neutrophils be raised?

A

Lymphocytes - viral or TB

Neutrophils - bacterial

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13
Q

What’s the key sign of meningococcal disease?

A

Non-blanching (purpuric) rash

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14
Q

What types of dementia present cortically? What are their features?

A

Frontotemporal dementia
AD
CJD

Higher cortical abnormalities, dysphasia, agnosia, apraxia

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15
Q

What are types of subcortical dementia and how do they present?

A

PD, HD, normal pressure hydrocephalus

Apathetic
Forgetful and slow
Depression
Impaired visuospatial

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16
Q

Which types of dementia present cortically and sub-cortically?

A

DLB

Multi infarct

17
Q

What parts of the brain does Korsakoff’s predominantly damage?

A

Mamillary bodies of hypothalamus
Anterior thalamic nucleus
= anterograde amnesia and confabulations

18
Q

Where would the damage be for unilateral or bilateral hearing loss?

A

Unilateral: cochlear nerve of cochlear nuclei
Bilateral: primary auditory cortex

19
Q

What’s the relationship between the 4th ventricle and CN VI and VII?

A

4th ventricle tumour/swelling can result in papilloedema, visual disturbance (unable to abduct), weakness of facial muscles

20
Q

Which sinus runs close to the internal occipital protuberance?

A

Superior sagittal sinus drains posteriorly, where it splits into the transverse sinuses

21
Q

Which cranial nerve nuclei are tested by the gag reflex?

A

Nucleus ambiguus and spinal trigeminal sensory nucleus

22
Q

What’s the efferent limb of the corneal reflex?

A

Facial nerve to orbicularis oculi

can be damaged in forceps delivery by damaging stylomastoid foramen

23
Q

What are the 3 features of DLB?

A

Parkinsonism, Dementia, Hallucinations

24
Q

How does AD and DLB differ on imaging?

A

Rapid atrophy of hippocampus in AD

25
Q

What class of drugs is used to slow progression of dementia?

A

Anticholinesterases

26
Q

Despite the hallucinations, why are antipsychotics contraindicated in patients with DLB?

A

Will exacerbate the parkinsonism symptoms (D2 antagonism)

27
Q

What are lay health beliefs? What are 4 sources of them?

A

Ordinary people (non medical professionals) knowledge of health and illness that are generally rooted in their own experience

Society, culture, personal experience, social identity

28
Q

What’s the difference between moderate sedation and general anaesthesia?

A

In moderate sedation, patients are conscious but relaxed and able to maintain verbal communication
In GA there is loss of consciousness - the patient is without awareness and sensation

29
Q

What scale is used to assess sedation and what’s the ideal score?

A

Ramsay scale 2 = calm

Richmond/Riker agitation scales too

30
Q

What type of bleeds are lentiform or crescent shaped?

A
Lentiform = extradural (arterial)
Crescent = subdural (venous)
31
Q

What are the 2 legal principles under which someone who lacks capacity to consent can be treated?

A

Doctrine of necessity

Best interests

32
Q

Which 2 people can make decisions on behalf of those without capacity?

A

Court appointed deputy

Lasting power of attorney

33
Q

What are some visuospatial tests (of hemispatial neglect)?

A

Ask patient to draw a clock face

Draw a flower

34
Q

What’s the visual deficit called when the lesion is in Meyer’s loop?

A

Upper quadrantopia

lower quadrantopia when superior aspect of optic radiation damaged

35
Q

What’s inability to track movements/objects called? Damage where results in it?

A

Akinetopia

Dorsal pathway of vision runs through the parietal lobes to the frontal lobes