Localization of Cortical Dysfunction Flashcards
What are the 3 domains of consciousness?
- alertness
- attention
- awareness
Level Of Consciousness (4):
awake state on one end of spectrum to coma on the other
-
awake
- one is able to maintain alertness, attention, awareness including awareness of self & environment
-
sleepy
- alertness wanes after short period without stimulation
-
stupor
- alertness severely impaired
- attention, awareness only maintained with continued stimulation
-
coma
- loss of alertness, attention, awareness
- unarousable
- delirium:
- encephalopathy:
-
delirium
- alert and aware, but attention severely impaired
- confused
-
encephalopathy
- all 3 domains affected, but to a lesser degree than in a coma
- some alertness maintained
Where are structural or functional abnormalities that can cause an altered state of consiousness?
-
diffuse bilateral cerebral hemispheres
- lesion involving half the cerebrum will typically NOT cause altered consciousness
- although they will have focal deficits
-
bilateral thalami
- because ARAS projects to brain, which then projects to cerebrum
-
brainstem ARAS
- ascending reticular activation system
FRONTAL LOBE:
Primary motor cortex
- functions to voluntarily control contralateral movement
- lesion (eg. stroke) ⇒ contralateral hemiparesis
- activation (eg. seizure) ⇒ contralateral clonic movements
-
Jacksonian march
- seizures in the primary motor cortex that travels along gyrus
- activates muscles in an order seen on the motor homunculus
FRONTAL LOBE:
Frontal Eye Fields
-
contralateral saccades
- voluntary eye movements to contralateral field
-
lesion of FEF ⇒ ipsilateral gaze preference
- eg. L FEF stroke ⇒ L gaze preference
FRONTAL LOBE:
Broca’s Area
- fluency of language
-
inferior frontal lobe in dominant hemisphere
- in most R handed and most L handed people, language is represented in the dominant (L) hemisphere
- more L handed individuals tend to have bilateral language representation
- loss of function causes a Broca’s aphasia = Non-fluent aphasia
- speech is non-fluent, halting, effortful, composed of few words that usually make sense
- agrammatic
- repetition impaired
- Broca’s area is supplied by MCA
- lesion could be caused by stroke or tumor
FRONTAL LOBE:
Prefrontal Cortex
- provides ORDER
- mediates personality, executive function, ability to sequence & organize tasks, abstract, problem solving
FRONTAL LOBE:
Orbitofrontal cortex
- provides RESTRAINT
- inhibits socially inappropriate behavior
-
part of limbic system
- plays role in memory & emotions
-
2 most common ways to lesion this region of brain
- head trauma as orbitofrontal cortex rubs along base of skull with jagged surface
- meningioma (tumor of meninges at base of skull)
Frontotemporal dementia (Pick’s disease):
- progressive dementia due to neurodegeneration
- affects prefrontal cortex first ⇒ causes personality changes, irritability, mood changes, poor executive function
- eventually affects other regions of frontal cortex such as orbitofrontal cortex & also temporal cortex
- dementia occurs in mid life (50’s), which is much earlier than most cases of Alzheimer’s
- lifespan is shortened
FRONTAL LOBE:
Mesiofrontal cortex
- provides INITIATIVE
-
mediates motivation, goal-directed behavior
- micturition inhibitory center allows voluntary inhibition of urination
- lesion causes akinetic mutism (patients do not move or talk), abulia (lack of initiative), incontinence as seen in hydrocephalus (ventricles enlarge & stretch fibers travelling medially to spinal cord)
PARIETAL LOBE:
Primary somatosensory cortex
mediates contralateral sensation
PARIETAL LOBE:
Parietal somatosensory association cortices
-
mediates higher order sensation (primary sensation must be intact):
- graphesthesia = ability to discern what is written on skin
- stereognosis = ability to discern object placed in hand based on sensation
Describe the characterstics of a deficit in the parietal somatosensory association cortex on the non-dominant side:
-
non-dominant parietal cortex (in most people, the R parietal cortex) drives spatial attention on both hemifields
- R parietal cortex controls spatial attention on L hemifield >> R hemifield
- L parietal cortex controls spatial attention on R hemifield primarily
- lesion of non-dominant parietal cortex (R) results in contralateral neglect & apraxia
-
neglect = not paying attention to contralateral hemifield
- eg. R parietal lesion will cause severe L neglect
- patient “ignores” the left side of the world
- they will bump into objects on L side, will ignore the L side of their body
Apraxia:
inability to perform a skilled task
- brushing teeth, combing hair, dressing, tying shoe lace