General neurological Flashcards
Where is the lesion if the pattern is affecting muscle groups, not individual muscles, with little muscle wasting, spasticity in large muscles and hyperreflexia?
UMN lesion
Where is the lesion if the pattern is affecting muscle groups, not individual muscles, with little muscle wasting, and loss of skilled fine finger movements.
UMN lesion
Where is the lesion if the affected muscles show wasting and fasciculation, there is hypotonia and hyporeflexia?
LMN lesion.
Where is the lesion if the pattern is weakness of all movements of a hand or foot, with normal or decreased tone?
Cortical lesion
Where is the lesion if there is hemiparesis with epilepsy?
Contralateral cerebral hemisphere
Where is the lesion if there is hemiparesis with decreased cognition?
Contralateral cerebral hemisphere
Where is the lesion if there is hemiparesis with homonymous hemianopia?
Contralateral cerebral hemisphere
Where is the lesion if there is hemiparesis with a contralateral cranial nerve palsy?
The brainstem on the side of the cranial nerve palsy.
Peripheral neuropathy that often causes proximal lesions
Guillain-Barre syndrome.
What lesion gives dorsal column loss on the side of the lesion, and spinothalamic loss on the contralateral side?
Brown-Sequard picture; a hemicord lesion.
What domain does carotid artery occlusion affect?
At worst, the anterior 2/3 of its hemisphere and the basal ganglia, more often it appears like a middle cerebral artery occlusive picture.
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives just dizziness?
Superior cerebellar artery
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives dizziness and deafness?
Anterior inferior cerebellar artery
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives dizziness with dysphagia and dysphonia?
Posterior inferior cerebellar artery
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives a weak numb contralateral leg and similar but milder arm symptoms, with face being spared.
Anterior cerebral artery
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives akinetic mutism?
Bilateral occlusion of anterior cerebral arteries.
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives hemiparesis, hemisensory loss and dysphagia?
Contralateral middle cerebral artery (of dominant hemisphere)
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives hemiparesis, hemisensory loss and homonymous hemianopia?
Contralateral middle cerebral artery
Occlusion of which artery in the brain gives hemiparesis, hemisensory loss and visuo-spatial disturbance (can’t get dressed, gets lost etc)?
Contralateral middle cerebral artery (of non-dominant hemisphere)
Occlusion of which artery gives homonymous hemianopia only?
Posterior cerebral artery.
Drugs enhancing GABA activity are used in which conditions? What is an example of such a drug?
Epilepsy, neuropathic pain and spasticity.
Gabapentin, valproate and baclofen.
Causes of vertigo
Benign positional vertigo Acute labyrinthitis Meniere's disease Ototoxicity Acoustic neuroma Traumatic damage Herpes Zoster
What is benign positional vertigo?
Vertigo caused by debris in the semicircular canal.
Maneuvers to be used in benign positional vertigo.
Hallpike’s for diagnosis
Epley’s for treatment.
Acute labyrinthitis - symptoms
Acute vertigo, vomiting, nausea but NO tinnitus or deafness.