Neurology & Psych (from MCQBank) Flashcards
(117 cards)
which population do we not find friedereich ataxia?
east asia (china and japan)
american indians
predisposing factor for bulimia
females
low self-esteem
personal/FHx of depression
personal/FHx of obesity
high personal expectations
FHx eating disorders
parents older than average
disturbed family interactions
early menarche
social pressures to be slim
Time to hold someone under section
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5(2)
- 5(4)
- 135
- 136
2 = 28days, assessment
3 = 6 months, treatment
4 = 72 hours, assessment
5(2) = in hopital, by doctor, 72 hrs
5(4) = in hospital, by nurse, 6 hours
135 = break into house by police
136 = public place, detained by police, 24hr
Simulated disease divided into:
1. Unconsciously produced (somatoform disorders):
- mainly neurological symptoms - ?diagnosis
- multiple organ systems - ?diagnosis
- Intentionally produced (deception syndromes:
- without external incentives - ?diagnosis
- with external incentives - ?diagnosis
- conversion disorder
- somatisation disorder
- factitious disorder (includes Munchausen sydnrome, by proxy is when someone afflict/create the problem on someone else - usually carer on patient)
- malingering
Treatment of Bell’s palsy (within 72 hours)
oral prednisolone 50mg OD for 10 days
Increased risk factors for those who commit suicide
Male
Repeated self-harm
Has physical health conditions
Express suicidal intent
Schneider’s first rank symptoms of schizophrenia
auditory hallucinations
thought withdrawal, insertion or interruption
thought broadcasting
somatic hallucinations
delusional perception
feelings or actions experienced as made or influenced by external agents
New screening tool for eating disorders
SCOFF
Sick, control, one, fat, food
- have you ever eaten so uncomfortably full that you feel sick?
- do you ever worry that you lost control of what you eat?
- have you recently lost weight or gained more than 1 stone in 3 months?
do you believe yourself as fat when others say you are thin? - would you say that food dominates your life?
> =2 is high risk of eating disorder
Multi-system atrophy - signs and symptoms
Autonomic features (Postural hypotension, urinary dysfunction)
Cerebellar ataxia (poor balance, broad-based gait)
Parkinsonism symptoms (resting tremor, rigidity etc)
Normal pressure hydrocephalus - signs and symptoms
Gait disturbance
Urinary incontinence
Dementia
Arteries or Veins affects:
- subarachnoid
- subdural
- extradural
Subarachnoid: vein?
Subdural: cortical bridging veins
Extradural: artery?
Treatment of trigeminal neuralgia
Carbamezepine (also oxcarbamezepine)
?TCA
?Lamotrigine/Baclofen
Cataract, muscle weakness, balding - ?diagnosis
myotonic dystrophy
inheritance pattern for myotonic dystrophy
autosomal dominant
also, has anticipation - ie earlier for successive generations
Inheritance pattern of Freiderich’s ataxia
autosomal recessive
Clinical features of borderline personality disorder
4 main clinical features/areas:
- Emotional instability (affective dysregulation)
- Disturbed patterns of thinking or perception (cognitive distortions or perceptual distortions)
- Impulsive behaviour
- Intense but unstable relationships
Difference between baby blues, postnatal depression and puerperal psychosis
Baby blues - high OR low mood, within 10 days post-delivery. no specific tx as care of baby is not impaired.
Post-natal depression - occurs within 12 months of delivery. low mood, anhedonia, weight changes, sleep disturbance etc. need to be treated as can cause substantive impairment for mum and impaired behavioural/emotional/cognitive changes for baby
Puerperal pyschosis - aka post-partum psychosis. has hallucinations, severe thought disturbance and abnormal behaviour soon after birth. high risk for those who have history of bipolar disorder or previous puerperal psychosis. seek urgent specialist advice
Serotonin syndrome - what is it?
- neuromuscular excitation
- autonomic effects (blurred vision, tremor, myoclonic jerking, tachycardic, hyper-reflexia, ankle clonus)
- altered mental status
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome - what is it?
due to dopamine antagonist (eg anti-psychotic, metoclopramide)
hyperthermia, muscle rigidity, altered mental status, sympathetic nervous system lability, hypermetabolism, elevated creatine kinase
Tx: stop dopamine antagonist (OR start dopamine agonist), rehydration, cooling, tx of rhabdomyolysis (if applicable)
malignant hyperthermia - what is it?
due to inhaled anaesthetics or succinylcholine (suxamethonium)
thought to be autosomal dominant in RYR1
muscle rigidity, tachycardia, hyperthermia, mixed metabolic and respiratory acidosis
tx: dantrolene, cooling, IVI
patient recently started with SSRI for depression. 3 months later she is completely cured. what is the next step?
continue the SSRI for a further 6 months (following remission of symptoms)
started clozapine for schizophrenia. then developed sore throat - what is happening?
neutropenia side effect
check FBC weekly for the first 18 weeks then fortnightly for next 34 weeks then monthly
reduced visual acuity and colour perception (esp red)
orbital pain worse with exercise
pupillary light defect present
swollen optic disc
?diagnosis
optic neuritis
what is Urthoff phenomenom?
visual loss/neurological symptoms worsenign due to heat or exercise
due to optic neuritis