Peripheral Neuropathies Flashcards

0
Q

Carpal tunnel syndrome examination

A

Sensation in index>little finger, impairment on one side of ring finger
Weakness of thumb abduction and wasting of APB
Tinel and phalen signs

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1
Q

Carpal tunnel syndrome history

A

Pins and needles in fingers
Sensory loss or pain proximally or wrist
Weakness in thumb/fingers
Occurs for a few minutes at night on waking or when gripping

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2
Q

Tinel sign

A

A test for irritated nerves used to diagnose carpal tunnel

Taping on the nerve elicit a ‘pins and needles’ sensation over the distribution of the nerve

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3
Q

Phalen manoeuvre

A

A way to test for carpal tunnel by holding the hands at full forced flexion for 30-60 seconds, or at full extension for 2mins (reverse phalen)
The pressure in the carpal tunnel is raised by the contraction of FDP pulling the lumbricals into it,worsening any symptoms.

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4
Q

Pathology of carpal tunnel

A

Pressure on the nerve> demyelination> slow conduction
If pressure is prolonged > axonal loss > wasting of muscle
Demyelination is reversible, axonal loss much less
In CTS the median nerve conduction is slower than the ulna nerve

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5
Q

Carpal tunnel syndrome treatment

A

Early treatment is occupational
After this splinting
Steroid injections
Surgery

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6
Q

Ulnar neuropathy at the elbow

A

Often history of arthritis or trauma with a palpable ulnar nerve
Pain/tenderness at elbow and sensory loss in the lateral ring and little finger
Weakness and wasting in the small muscles of the hand

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7
Q

Common perineal nerve palsy

A

Foot drop or weakness and numbness
Made worse by compression (bending, squatting, crossing legs)
Often occurs after long periods of compression (flights) and usually recover after a couple of two days

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8
Q

Generalised peripheral neuropathies

A

Can be hereditary or acquired
Axonal or demyelination
Polyneuropathy (single continuous problem) or mononeuritis multiplex (multiple distinct mononeuropathy)

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9
Q

Length dependant polyneuropathy

A

Length dependant, glove and stockings distribution
Symmetrical, distal sensory loss/wasting/areflexia
Check for metabolic cause (glucose, B12, folate, thyroid)
Treat underlying cause and give drugs for pain (gabapentin, pregabalin, amotriptyline)

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10
Q

Pathogensis of peripheral neuropathies

A

Axonal –> muscle wasting, pain, sensory symptoms and signs but only ankle reflexes lost

Demyelinating –> weakness without wasting, motor signs, general loss of reflexes

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11
Q

Nerve conduction changes in peripheral neuropathies

A

Axonal –> small amplitude, Normal velocity/F waves
Needle EMG: denervation
Demyelination –> prolonged distal latency, slow velocity with conduction block, prolonged F waves
Needle EMG: possibly normal

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12
Q

F waves

A

When a nerve is stimulated in an EMG the impulse travels up the nerve to the spine and come back down producing a second wave

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13
Q

Diabetic neuropathies

A

Symmetrical distal length dependant sensory deficits
Proximal neuropathy lumbosacral radiculo-plexus neuropathy
Can also get mononeuropathy

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14
Q

Demyelination neuropathies

A

Hereditary–> Charcot-Marie-tooth disease
Acquired–> acute : Guillain-Barré syndrome
Chronic –> chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP)
IgM paraprotein-associated

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15
Q

Clinical findings in Guillain-Barré syndrome

A

Raised CSF protein but normal cells
Reduced conduction velocity/block due to patchy demyelinating neuropathy
Can lead to secondary axonal loss

16
Q

Guillain-Barré syndrome

A

Acute ascending progressive paralysis, sensory loss and areflexia, often secondary to infection
Worsening progress over 1-3 weeks –> risk of respiratory muscle involvement or cardiac arrhythmias
Recover in 2-6 months

17
Q

Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP)

A

Chronic form of GBS giving a syndrome similar to peripheral MS, with weakness more Than sensory loss
Usually worst proximal
Areflexia
Raised CSF protein

18
Q

Causes of mononeuritis multiplex

A

Diabetes
Vasculitis, ANCA associated or secondary rheumatological or due to hepatitis B/C
Multiple nerve compressions

19
Q

Bell’s palsy

A

Acute unilateral facial nerve weakness
May have pain behind the ear, Loss of taste or hyperacusis
UMN palsy effects all muscles equally, LMN palsy spares forehead
Treat with 10day prednisolone –> 75% improve spontaneuously
25% develop synkinesis/crocodile tears

21
Q

Crocodile tears

A

A rare consequence of recovery from Bell’s palsy causes faulty regeneration of the nerve such that the patient sheds tears when the eat

22
Q

Motor Neuron Disease - symptoms

A

MND refers to a collection of 5 syndromes with different presentations and symptoms

23
Q

MND - treatment

A

No curative treatment but Riluzole (blocks TTX sensitive Na channels which occur in damaged neurons) prolongs survival for 2-3 months

24
Q

MND classification

A
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)
Primary Lateral sclerosis (PLS)
Progressive muscular Atrophy (PMA)
Progressive bulbar palsy (PBP)
Pseudobulbar palsy
25
Q

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)

A

Most common form of MND
a mix of UMN and LMN signs. 75% present with limb symptoms, 25% with bulbar symptoms
No sensory deficit
5% frontotemporal dementia and 30-50% show some subtle cognitive decline.

26
Q

Primary Lateral sclerosis (PLS)

A

A rare form of MND with only UMN symptoms with onset after 50. commonly progressive leg spasticity with pain, but may start in hands or face –> slowly progressive with normal life span unless it progresses to ALS

27
Q

Progressive Muscular atrophy (PMA)

A

A rare (4%) form of MND only affecting the LMNs with a life expectancy of ~ five years (ALS is less)
presents with atrophy, fasciculations and weakness
may present in just arms or legs, which has a better prognosis

28
Q

Progressive Bulbar Palsy

A

25% of people diagnosed, affects CN IX,X,XII (LMN)
slow onset at 50-70yrs with 1-3 year prognosis
25% of PBP pts will go on to develop ALS
can show emotional changes if corticobulbar tract is involved

29
Q

Pseudobulbar palsy

A

UMN damage in the bulbar region/corticobulbar tract of the brainstem. Presents with dysphagia, dysarthria, brisk jaw jerk, spastic tongue and labile affect.often found to have UMN signs in the limbs as well. Can be due to several reason and a form of MND

30
Q

Cauda Equina syndrome

A

Compression or injury to the cauda equina at the end of the spinal cord (L1/2). Presents with low back pain +-radiation to the legs, LMN signs in the legs, saddle sensory abnormalities and sphincter dysfunction