week 5- diseases Flashcards

1
Q

Red flags for PD diagnosis

A
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2
Q

name something that would be decreased in the CSF of Parkinsons Its

A

 Decreased HVA (hemovanillic acid- dopamine metabolite) in CSF

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3
Q

What is the Back hypothesis

A

GI sending toxins to the brain (vagus nerve innervates GI and it does bring stuff to the medulla brain starts in medulla (dorsal medulla CN X, XI) and makes its way up rostrally Can find lewy bodies to PD PTs early on,….smell lost first because olfactory neurons sensitive to toxins from the GI

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4
Q

what is the Parkinsons staging

A

starts in medulla (dorsal medulla CN X, XI) and makes its way up rostrally • Presymptomatic 1-2, symptomatic – 3-4 with lost dopamine, advanced 5-6 with dementia

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5
Q

what are the predisposing factors for Parkinsons disease

A

Age (incidence increases rapidly over 60y, mean age of dx 70.5y)

Males

Genetics: SNCA , LRRK2, GBA

Pesticide exposure

Europe, North American, South American have higher prevalence

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6
Q

what is the classical clinical presentation of parkinsons

A

Classic presentation TRAP – tremor, cogwheel rigidity, akinesia (bradykinesia, hypokinesia) and postural instability

May also see: masked faces, orthostatic hypotension, constipation prior to manifestation, festinating gait, freezing, micrographia, microphonia

clinically–> see less heel to toe tapping

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7
Q

what sign is always consistent for PD

A

Cogwheel rigidity classic for parkinsons

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8
Q

what is the Tx for PD

A

COMT –> MOA –> agonist –> L dopa

L-DOPA (levadopa) + carbidopa–>

Moderate to severe

DA agonists (e.g. pramipexole) –>

Can be used for moderate symptoms in <65 yo over levodopa b/c less likely to cause dyskinesias and once/day dosing

MAO-B inhibitors (e.g. rasagiline, selegiline)

Because dopamine can be converted into this

mild symptoms

COMT inhibitors (e.g. entacapone)

Because dopamine can be converted into this

Amantadine (antiviral)

(mech of action in PD is unknown. It may cause NE release; may block NMDA receptors)

Anticholinergics (mAChR antagonists)

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9
Q

where would you target a DBS for PD

A

rigidity and bradykinesia–> STN and GPI

tremor target thalamus

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10
Q

what is the mechanism of astrocyte modulation as a potential PD therapeutic

A

increase endocannabinoids and excite the direct pathway or inhibit the indirect

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11
Q

how do you distinguish between lewy body dementia and PD

A

PD- if dementia is more than a year after motor symptoms

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12
Q

How do you manage psychosis and hallucinations in PD PTs

A

1st: lower PD drugs (usually due to amantadine, MAO-Is, dopamine agonists or COMT….levodopa least likely to cause)
2nd: low-dose antipsychotic: quetiapine or Pimavanserin (only approved drug for PD psychosis)

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13
Q

what do PD PTs usually die of

A

malnutrition and aspiration pneumonia is the leading cause of death in PD

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14
Q

what is the prognosis of PD

A

80% severely disabled or dead within 10-14 years of diagnosis

From disease impairment to disability occurred between 3-7 years after the onset of PD

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15
Q

what are some associated conditions of PD

A

Akinetic crisis (stiffness, hyperthermia) - can occur as a result of unintended dopamine withdrawal in patients on dopamine therapy

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16
Q

What is the pathophysiology of HD

A

Hyperkinetic disorder

loss of medium spiny neurons in striatum will see shrinking putamen and expansion of Lateral ventricles

  • Since medium spiny neurons are impacted it ill hit indirect path first = early presentation of hyperkinesia (chorea)
  • Loss of cortical and subcortical cells
  • decreased neurotrophins
  • excitotoxicity
  • astrocyte loss/ activation/ microglia activation
  • ROS

Eventual damage to both the direct (bradykinesia, rigidity and dystonia)

17
Q

what is wilsons disease, clinical presentation and how do you Tx it

A

Genetic Disorder of copper metabolism affecting the brain and the liver with a hallmark of Kayser-Fleischer ring (around cornea)

Presents as a movement disorder: dystonia, tremor, chorea, rigidity & additional BG-related signs

Tx = chelate the Cu++

18
Q

what is Tardive dyskinesia

A

Induced by anti-psychotics

Antipsychotics block D2 = activation of the indirect pathway ( aka block the inhibitor of indirect pathway )= increase inhibition = hypokinesia BUTTTTTT

Cortico-striatal path compensates by upregulation the blocked receptors = hyperkinesia

19
Q

what are other non hyperkinetic causes that you would differentiate from tremor

A

Asterixis, Chorea/athetosis, Clonus, Dyskinesias, Dystonia, Myoclonus, Seizure

20
Q

differentiate between the frequency of tremors

A

faster is usually least pathologic

physiologic tremor fastest, the intentional tremor and PD are the slowest

21
Q

parkinsonian tremor

characteristics

location

frequency

associated conditions

pathophysiology

A
22
Q

postural tremor

characteristics

location

frequency

associated conditions

pathophysiology

A
23
Q

Intentional/Cerebellar

characteristics

location

frequency

associated conditions

pathophysiology

A
24
Q

ID some of the parkinsonisms

A

drug induced, supranuclear palsy, Multiple system atrophy, vascular, lewy body dementia, corticobasal degeneration

25
Q

how do you differentiate drug induced from PD

A

drug induced usually symetrical, does not respond to Tx and improves with stopping of drug

26
Q

how do you differentiate supranuclear palsy from PD

A

they have more falls and they have eye involvement

27
Q

how do you differentoiate MSA from PD

A

MSA involves ANS dysfunction ad does not respond to levadopa

28
Q

how do you differentiate CBD from PD

A

CBD will have myoclonus, RIGIDITY and lack of limb control

29
Q

how do you differetiate vascular PD from PD

A

vascular PD will usually have lower limb involvement

YOU CAN DIFFERENTIATE THIS FROM CBD BY LACK OF MYOCLONUS AND RIGIDITY