neuro interactive cases Flashcards

1
Q

what are the 2 things youve got to determine for neuro ddx

A

anatomy

pathology

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2
Q

where is the anatomy that the path can be

A
Brain
Spinal cord
Nerve roots
Peripheral nerve(s)
Neuromuscular junction
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3
Q

what can the pathology be

A
Vascular
Infection
Inflammation/Autoimmune
Toxic/Metabolic
Tumour/Malignancy

Hereditary/congenital
Degenerative

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4
Q

timescale of stroke and CVS

A

sudden onset

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5
Q

characteristic of inflammation

A

flare ups

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6
Q

associated symptoms with neuro

A
visual 
swallowing 
hearing
neck stiffness  
weakness
paresthesia
bowel and bladder control
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7
Q

cranial nerves

A
I: sense of smell
II: VA, VF, pupils, fundoscopy
III, IV, VI: diplopia
V: sensation, corneal reflex
VII: facial palsy
VIII: hearing
IX, X: Speech, swallowing
XI: Sternocleidomastoid, trapezius
XII: tongue movements
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8
Q

order to test the optic nerve

A

AFRO
if can say number of fingers hold up - say do formally with snellen chart
if cant - do movement and light perception

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9
Q

order of upper and lower limb exam

A
Inspection
Tone
Power
Reflexes
Coordination
Sensation
Gait - at end because takes time in exam 
Back
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10
Q

UMN signs

A

increased tone - spasticity
reduced power
hyperreflexia
upgoing plantar reflex

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11
Q

LMN signs

A

reduced tone - flaccid
reduced power
hyporeflexia

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12
Q
diagnosis? 
Diplopia (bilateral 6th)
 Bilateral ptosis 
 Slurred speech
 Dysphagia
 Sluggish pupillary response to light
 Descending symmetric muscle weakness
 Multiple skin abscesses on arms & legs
A

o Flaccid paralysis
o Power low
o Reflexes diminished
o So LMN lesion
o If stroke affecting CN6 and CN further down – pt wouldn’t be alive
o Not a problem in brain ¬– if had abscess in brain lobe = unilateral contralateral
o Brainstem – if all way up affecting CN6 and lower cranial – pt would be dead
o Spinal cord –would cause paralysis, spastic paraopesisis
o Peripheral – would cause peripheral neuropathy
o All of these things mean– neuromuscular problem – IV drug user – presented with botulinism which impairs neuromuscular transmission – block Ach release
ddx = miller fisher variant of Guillian Barre

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13
Q

miller fisher variant of Guillain Barre

A

typically characterized by a triad of ataxia, areflexia, and ophthalmoplegia

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14
Q

what do you get with NMJ problem

A

o Bilateral cranial neuropathy and descending muscle weakness

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15
Q

what is spastic paraperesis

A

weakness of both legs
increased tone - lift leg up - whole leg off bed
brisk reflexes
upgoing planters

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16
Q

cerebellar signs

A

Ataxia - unsteady gait
Nystagmus
Dysdiadochokinesia (test rapidly alternating movements)
Intention tremor (finger-nose-finger test - past pointing and dysmetria )
Speech: slurred, scanning

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17
Q

loss of sensation if cerebral cortex lesion

A

hemisensory loss - contralateral

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18
Q

loss of sensation of spinal cord lesion

A

up to a level - eg up to umbilicus

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19
Q

loss of sensation if nerve root lesion (radiculopathy)

A

dermatomes

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20
Q

loss of sensation of mononeuropathy lesion

A

loss at specific area

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21
Q

loss of sensation of polyneuropathy

A

glove and stocking pattern

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22
Q

what is postural tremor

A

when holding particular position eg holding out arms

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23
Q
55 yr old man
Numbness & tingling in hands & feet
PMH: type 1 DM
On basal/bolus insulin
HbA1C: 50 mmol/mol
B12: 500 pg/ml (200 – 900) 
eGFR: 90
reduced sensation to pinprick - glove and stocking distribution 

what would you prescribe

A

o Hands and feet – thinking peripheral neuropathy – dm
o Bolus – with each meal
o Get long acting and then bolus
o Duloxetine – treatment of peripheral neuropathy with dm

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24
Q

pathology of peripheral neuropathy

A

o Infection – retroviral disease - HIV
inflammation - Guillain Barre
toxic/metabolic - dm, alcohol, b12 deficiency, uraemia, amyloidosis
tumour - paraneoplastic feature of a malignancy

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25
Q

toxic/metabolic causes of peripheral neuropathy and clinical clues

A
Drugs - Hx
Alcohol - Hx, high GGT and MCV
B12 deficiency - macrocytic anaemia 
Diabetes - history, glucose/HbA1c, polyuria, polydipsia 
Hypothyroidism - TFT 
Uraemia - UE 

Amyloidosis - History of myeloma or chronic infection/inflammation

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26
Q

Inflammation/Autoimmune

causes of peripheral neuropathy

A

Vasculitis, CTD, inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy

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27
Q

what is amyloidosis

A

deposition of abnormal protein because had infection/inflammation that interfere with structure or function
History of myeloma or chronic infection/inflammation
in myeloma plasma cells making Ig - form precursers of abnormal protein
or making abnormal inflamm markers in infection taht deposit as abnormal protein

28
Q

tumour or malignancy causes fo peripheral neuropathy

A

Paraneoplastic

Paraproteinaemia

29
Q

hereditory causes of peripheral neuropathy

A

Hereditary sensory motor neuropathy

30
Q
34 yr old woman
Weakness in legs
Blurred vision
increased tone, reduced power, and brisk reflexes 
reduced pinprick sensation in leg
blurring of optic disk 

what is cause of blurred vision

A

papillitis

o Pt young female with weakness, blurred vision - think inflammation
(papilledema wont affect vision, caused by raised ICP - blurred optic disk)
o Spastic paraparesis – spinal cord UMN
o Demyelination – MS if 2 lesions separated in time and space
o Inflammation of the optic nerve- papiliitis or optic neuritis

31
Q

describe optic neuritis/papillitis

A

Blurred optic disc margins
Blurred vision
Pain on eye movement - inflammation = pain

32
Q

causes of spastic paraparesis

A

in spinal cord - corticspinal/spinothalamic tracts
vascular: anterior spinal arteries
infection - spinal cord compression by TB (Potts disease)
inflammation - demyelination or transverse myelitis
toxic/metabolic - vit B12 deficiency
tumour/malignancy

33
Q

what is transverse myelitis

A

inflammation of the spinal cord eg after mycoplasma pneumonia

34
Q

what is MS

A

2 lesions

separated in time/space

35
Q
60 year old man
Pain & paraesthesia on anteriolateral thigh
PMH: Type 2 Diabetes
Metformin
HbA1C: 60 mmol/mol

BMI: 30 kg/m2
reduced pinprick sensation on anterolateral thigh

most appropriate next step management?

A

lose weight

36
Q

what is meralgia parasthesia

A

Compression of lateral femoral cutaneous nerve

37
Q

treatment of meralgia parasthesia

A
  • Reassure
  • Avoid tight garment
  • Lose weight

if persistent
• Carbamazepine
• Gabapentine

38
Q

what does the median nerve supply - sensation

A

lateral 3 dingers and half of ring finger

39
Q

what does the ulnar nerve supply - sensation

A

medial fingers

40
Q

what does radial nerve supply

A

back of hand - test base of thumb

41
Q

what is radiculopathy

A

disease of the nerve roots

42
Q

lumosacral radiculopathy

A

Pain in the buttock, radiating down the leg below the knee (‘sciatica’)
Compression by
Disc herniation
Spinal canal stenosis eg osteophytes

43
Q
60 year old man
Recurrent falls
Tremor at rest
Rigidity
More forgetful
Dysphagia
Micrographia
Limited upgaze

most likely dx

A

progressive supranuclear palsy

44
Q

parkinsons symptoms

A

Tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia

45
Q

what does parkinsons disease affect

A

Dopaminergic neurons

Substantia nigra

46
Q

progressive supranuclear palsy (Steele-Richardson syndrome) features

A

Parkinsonian features, upgaze abnormality

47
Q

lewy body dementia features

A

Features of Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s & hallucinations

48
Q
A 55-yr-old man 
Confusion & chest pain
No headache or neck stiffness
Recently moved to a new house.
Temp: 37oC
PR 110, BP 120/60
Normal CVS/Resp/GI/Neuro exam
ECG: sinus tachycardia, widespread ST depression
Urinalysis: NAD
Blood glucose: 7.0 mmol/L
WCC: 7
CRP < 5
CT head: NAD

What is the most likely cause of his confusion?

A
  • Not stroke – seen on CT
  • Not infection – low CRP
  • No other features of inflammation
  • Toxic – metabolic – urinalysis, toxic screen – CO possibility
49
Q

causes of apparent confusion and low AMTS - and the clinical clues

A

post-ictal - history of seizure
dysphagia (receptive/expressive) - other features of stroke/TIA
dementia - history of IHD/PVD, signs of excess alcohol
depressive pseudodementia - Elderly, withdrawn, poor eye contact
Precipitating factor

50
Q

types of dementia

A

Vascular (multi-infarct)
Alcoholic
Alzheimer’s disease
Inherited e.g. Huntington’s disease (HD)

51
Q

ddx of confusion/reduced consciousness

A
Hypoglycaemia
Vascular
Bleed: sudden onset Headache, collapse
Subdural haematoma (Fall, fluctuating consciousness)
Infection:
? Temp, ? Intracranial, ? Extra-cranial
Inflammation
Malignancy
Metabolic/Toxic:
Drugs, U&amp;Es, LFTs, Vitamin deficiencies, Endocrinopathies
52
Q

qns in AMTS (abbreviated mental test score)

A
DOB
Age
Time
Year
Place
Recall (West Register Street)
Recognize doctor/nurse
Prime Minister
Second WW
Count backwards from 20 to 1
53
Q

eyes GCS

A
4 = Spontaneous 
3 = Opens in response to voice
2 = Opens in response to painful stimuli
1 = Does not open
54
Q

verbal GCS

A
5 = Oriented
4 = Confused
3 = Words
2 = Sounds
1 = No sounds
55
Q

motor GCS

A
6 = Obeys commands
5 = Localizes pain
4 = Withdraws to painful stimuli
3 = Abnormal flexion
2 = Extension
1 = No movements
56
Q

features of meningitis

A

fever, neck stiffness, kernig’s sign (lie on back, pain when straighten knee)

57
Q

features of SAH and investigations

A

Sudden onset

CT, LP (xanthochromia)

58
Q

features and investigations of giant cell arteritis

A

Polymyalgia rheumatica
(Shoulder girdle pain, stiffness, constitutional upset)
> 50 years
ESR, steroids, Bx

59
Q

treatment of giant cell arteritis

A

 Steroid – prednisolone – urgent otherwise risk of them going blind

60
Q

feature of migraine

A

Throbbing, vomiting, photo/phonophobia, FHx, Aura

61
Q

pituitary apoplexy

A

IV hydrocortisone, bleed into pit tumour – see by endo and neurosurgeon

62
Q

management of stroke

A

< 4.5 hours
CT: no haemorrhage
Thrombolysis (if no contraindications)

> 4.5 hours
CT head (exclude haemorrhage)
Aspirin (300mg), Swallow assessment
Maintain hydration, oxygenations, monitor glc

63
Q

managment of TIA

A
Aspirin
Don’t treat BP acutely
unless > 220/120 or 
other indication
ECG, Echocardiogram
Carotid Doppler - do they need  carotid endarterectomy 
Risk factor modification
64
Q

40 year old
Backache
LMN weakness

Admitted to HDU
Regular FVC
Cardiac monitor
IVIG

most likely dx

A

o When LMN weakness – need to measure FVC and cardiac monitor – risk need admission to ITU for vent support
o Cardiac feature – autonomic features
o Guillain barre – LMN – get radiculopathy – back ache becasyue the nerve roots are affected
o Really need to measure FVC!

65
Q

features of cauda equina syndrome

A

bowel and bladder symptoms