How to Localize Neurologic Lesion Flashcards
1
Q
Neurologic deficits can be localized to one of 10 sites:
A
- Cerebral cortex
- Subcortical area
- Cerebellum
- Brainstem
- Spinal cord
- Plexus (plexopathy)
- Roots (radiculopathy)
- Peripheral nerve (peripheral neuropathy)
- NMJ
- Muscle (myopathy)
2
Q
Cerebral cortex lesions
A
Two main deficits:
- Contralateral motor or sensory deficits
-
Aphasia
- Common when L hemisphere involved
- Visual-spatial deficits common when R hemisphere involved
3
Q
Subcortical lesions
A
- Internal capsule, cerebral peduncles, thalamus, pons
- Hemiparesis is usually complete (face, arm, leg) because neurons controlling these structures all merge together subcortically and are very close together
4
Q
Cerebellum lesions
A
Incoordination, intention tremor, ataxia
5
Q
Brainstem lesions
A
- Cranial nerve and spinal cord findings
- Crossed hemiplegia (deficit on ipsilateral face and contralateral body) b/c corticospinal tract, dorsal columns, and spinothalamic tracts cross but cranial nerves do not
6
Q
Spinal cord lesions
A
- With acute injuries, spinal shock may. be present and UMN signs may not be apparent initially.
- Pt presents with UMN signs (spasticity, increased DTRs, clonus, +Babinski sign), but these signs mayb e present with lesions in brainstem adn cortical/subcortical regions as well
- Decrease in sensation below a sharp band in the abdomen/trunk. Pinprick felt above this level but not below it. –> pathognomonic for spinal cord disease –> level of lesion corresponds to sensory level
7
Q
Plexopathy
What is the most common cause overall?
What is the most common cause for lumbosacral plexopathy?
Commonly involved plexuses?
A
- Deficits (motor and sensory) involve MORE than one nerve
- Trauma = most common cause overall (esp for brachial plexus)
- Postsurgical hematoma
- Erb-Duchenne type –> upper trunk C5-6 and Lumbosacral plexus L5-S3
8
Q
Roots (radiculopathy)
A
- Pain = key finding***
- Affects a group of muscles supplied by a spinal root (myotome) and a sensory area. supplied by a spinal root. (dermatome)
- Weakness, atrophy, sensory deficits in a dermatomal pattern
9
Q
Peripheral neuropathy
A
- Weakness = more prominent distally at outset (as opposed to muscle myopathy) –usually symmetric
- Dec DTR, numbness, tingling, muscle atrophy, fasciculations
- Can be due to diabetes, trauma, entrapment, vasculitis
- Common neuropathies: radila/ulnar/median/musculocutaneous nerves, long thoracic nerve, axillary n., common peroneal n. , femoral n.
10
Q
NMJ
A
- Fatigability = key finding
- Muscles become weaker with use and recover with rest
- Normal sensation; no atrophy
11
Q
Myopathy
A
ACQUIRED DISEASE (inherited)
- Symmetric weakness affects proximal muscles more than distal muscles (shoulder/hips)
- Normal reflexes but may diminish late in disease
- NORMAL SENSATION/ NO FASCICULATIONS
- Muscle atrophy may occur late due to disuse (in contrast to rapid atrophy in motor neuron disease)