1 / 283

LMCC Preparation Back to Basics

LMCC Preparation Back to Basics. Neurology Dr. C.R. Skinner 14 April 2010. Major Topics. Neurology Made Simple Review Headache Trauma Infections Cerebrovascular Disease Demyelination Seizures Degenerative Diseases Sleep Disorders. Neurology Made Simple Questions.

Download Presentation

LMCC Preparation Back to Basics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LMCC PreparationBack to Basics Neurology Dr. C.R. Skinner 14 April 2010

  2. Major Topics • Neurology Made Simple Review • Headache • Trauma • Infections • Cerebrovascular Disease • Demyelination • Seizures • Degenerative Diseases • Sleep Disorders

  3. Neurology Made SimpleQuestions • Is the Problem Neurological? • If So , Where Is It in the Nervous System ? • What Is the Most Likely Cause ? • Is This Problem Serious Enough to Require Urgent Referral ? • How to Stabilize the Patient During Transport

  4. NEUROLOGY MADE SIMPLEIS THE PROBLEM NEUROLOGICAL? • Are there hard organic features ? • Is the behaviour bizarre ? • Is there a history of seizures, drugaddiction or of psychiatric illness ? • Do the signs and symptoms make sense ?

  5. NEUROLOGY MADE SIMPLEINTRODUCTION • NEUROLOGICAL PROBLEM • WHERE IS THE LESION • WHAT IS THE CAUSE • INVESTIGATION • TREATMENT • PROGNOSIS

  6. Localization Matrix

  7. NEUROLOGY MADE SIMPLEINTRODUCTION • NEUROLOGICAL PROBLEM • WHERE IS THE LESION • WHAT IS THE CAUSE • INVESTIGATION • TREATMENT • PROGNOSIS

  8. Etiology Matrix

  9. NEUROLOGY MADE SIMPLEINVESTIGATIONS • History • Physical • According to presumed localizationand etiology • Metabolic systemic CSF • Structural • Neurophysiological

  10. Time Sequence • When was the person last neurologically normal? • What was the speed of onset of the symptoms? • What was the state of the patient’s health in the last few days, weeks, months? • What medications is the patient taking and has there been any recent changes? • Are there any significant other medical or surgical problems?

  11. ESSENTIAL HISTORICAL FEATURESHISTORY OF PRESENT ILLNESS • Headache • Loss Of Consciousness • Weakness • Difficulty With Vision , Hearing , Taste • Numbness • Weakness • Dizziness • Lightheadedness , Vertigo, Off balance • Fatigue • Loss Of Balance • Loss Of Coordination • Difficulty Swallowing, Chewing • Urinary And Stool Incontinence • Sexual Dysfunction • Sleep Difficulties

  12. Etiology Matrix

  13. NEUROLOGY MADE SIMPLELOCALIZATION ANALYSIS • Muscle • Neuromuscular junction • Peripheral nerve • Spinal cord • Brain stem • Thalamus or basal ganglia • Cortex • Cerebellum

  14. Localization Matrix

  15. Muscle

  16. Neuromuscular Junction

  17. Peripheral Nerves

  18. Lateral Medullary Syndrome • Ipsilateral • Pain numbness, impaired sensation over half of face • Ataxia of limbs with falling towards side of lesion • Vertigo, nausea, vomiting • Horner’s syndrome • Contralateral • Impaired pain and temperature sensation over half of the body and some of the face

  19. Lateral Pontine Syndrome • Ipsilateral • Horizontal, vertical nystagmus vertigo, nausea, vomiting, oscillopsia • Facial paralysis • Paralysis of conjugate gaze to side of lesion • Deafness, tinnitus • Ataxia • Impaired sensation over face • Contralateral • Impaired pain and thermal sense over half of body

  20. Ventral Midbrain SyndromeWeber’s Syndrome • Ipsilateral • Diplopia, dilated pupil • Ataxia • Contralateral • Hemiplegia, mainly upper limb and face

  21. CORRELATIVE FACTORSCAPSULE, THALAMUS AND BASAL GANGLIA • Hemi-sensory or motor signs • Sensory signs of primary modalities • Sensory involvement of the trunk • Lack of cortical signs • Uniform motor signs in arm ,leg and face • Hypertension risk factor

  22. CORRELATIVE FACTORSCORTICAL • Aphasia and right sided weaknessfluent, non - fluent, paraphasia • Weakness - arm and face more than leg • Visual field defects • Cortical sensory disturbanceinattentionleft-rightacalculiaagnosiaapraxia

  23. CerebellumBasal Ganglia • Modulating structures • Rule out other systems first • Ipsilateral Rule for pure cerebellar lesions

  24. FINAL CHECKLISTTHINGS NOT TO MISS • MUSCLEPOLYMYOSITIS, POLYMYALGIA RHEUMATICA • NEUROMUSCULARMYASTHENIA • PERIPHERAL NERVEGUILLAIN - BARRE SYNDROME • SPINAL CORDACUTE SPINAL CORD COMPRESSION

  25. FINAL CHECKLISTTHINGS NOT TO MISS • BRAIN STEM • STROKE, MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS • MENINGITISLISERIA, TB • GUILLAIN - BARRE - FISHER VARIANT • TUMORS

  26. FINAL CHECKLISTTHINGS NOT TO MISS • CORTEX • STROKE • HERPES ENCEPHALTIS • SEIZURES • TUMORS • SUBARACHNOID HEMORRHAGE

  27. Circulation of CSF Circulation du LCR

  28. Case • This 20 year old man presents with a three day history of abnormal behaviour consisting of hallucinations, delusions of grandeur and memory loss for recent events. • He had been " up north " fishing just prior to the onset of these symptoms.

  29. Case • Physical Exam • Fever 38.0 C • Inattentive • Poor short term memory • Left upper quadrantopsia • Hyperflexia Left upper and lower limb

  30. Case 1 • Where is the lesion? • why? • What is the cause? • What are the immediate treatment priorities?

  31. Herpes Simplex Encephalitis • Any time of year, any age, any sex • Selective infection of temporal lobes • New onset seizures or behaviour disturbance • Treat if you suspect - Acyclovir 30 mgm/kg-day

  32. Herpes SimplexTreatment • Acyclovir IV • Management of ICP (max at 8 – 10 Days) • Head up • Hyperventilation • Mannitol • Hypertonic Saline • Seizure treatment

  33. CASE 2 This 24 year old soldier was doing his early morning run with his regimental company. He developed an acute severe headache which caused him to stop and fall to the ground. On examination, he was alert, oriented, moving all four limbs with a normal neurological examination. Where is the lesion ?

  34. CT Scan without contrast

  35. Subarachoid Hemorrhage CT Scan Subarachnoid Blood

  36. Subarachnoid Hemorrhage • Worse headache of life • Sudden onset, often with activity • Signs of meningeal irritation • Kernig, Brudzinski • Focal signs • Signs of coma • Positive CT scan • Positive LP

  37. Subarachnoid Hemorrhage • Blood in subarachnoid space • Require urgent referral for angiogram • Use acetaminophen not ASA for headache

  38. Subarachnoid HemorrhageInvestigations • CT Scan - 90 - 95% sensitive • LP - nearly 100% sensitive • rbc in CSF • xanthochromic in CSF after 12 – 18 hours • Angiogram • Treatment • surgical clipping • coiling

  39. Subarachnoid HemorrhageTreatment • Clipping • Coiling

  40. Giant Aneurysm

  41. GDC Coil

More Related