Lecture 41: Hemiparesis and Stroke Flashcards
What is hemiparesis and hemiplegia?
Hemiparesis = Weakness Hemiplegia = No movement at all
Unilateral paralysis / weakness face, arm and leg
What is paraparesis and paraplegia?
Bilateral weakness / paralysis of both legs
What is the characteristic pattern of weakness for pyramidal lesion: Upper vs lower limbs
Upper limbs
- Flexor muscles may be weak but are stronger than the extensors
Lower limbs
- Extensor muscles may be weak but are stronger than the flexors. Ie leg is straight and gait may circumflex instead to avoid the foot scrap b/c dorsiflexion and leg extension. (obv sign of pyramidal distribution lesion when walk in)
What is the characteristic posture and gait with pyramidal weakness?
- Upper limb held flexed
- Lower limb extended
- The person walks with a stiff leg and foot may scrape the floor
What is the characteristic weakness of pyramidal lesions?
Pyramidal weakness is also associated with;
- Increased tone (spastic catch)
- Increased reflexes
- Extensor plantar response (Babinksi reflex)
‘pyramidal distribution weakness)
Describe the pattern of LMN weakness:
Pattern depends on which nerve root or peripheral nerve is damaged i.e C5 nerve root lesion -> Shoulders abduction weakness
- Decreased tone
- Decreased reflexes
- Downwards plantar response
NB go back over his clinical presentation and see if there are any additional notes that could be made
Remove this once done