NCS Flashcards
What must be positive on EMG to diagnose something as a “generalized process”
positive findings in at least 3 extremities.
depolarization at the cathode occurs in ____ direction.
It is slowed _____ thanks to the anode
both
proximally because of hyperpolarization over the anode
A ____ study is when an impulse travels away from the stimulator in the opposite direction that it does physiologically.
antidromic
CMAP stands for ___ and is found in ____ study
compound muscle action potential - pure motor study
SNAP stands for ___- and is found in ____ study
Sensory nerve action potential; pure sensory (stimulate over entire peripheral nerve and pickup discally)
CNAP stands for ______ and is found in ____ study
Compound nerve action potential - stimulate over a mixed nerve and pickup over the nerve proximally. Pick up sensory and motor fibers.
assesses the functional status in health and responses to various disease processes. NCS allow to localize focal lesions or detect generalized disease process.
What are the disadvantages for needle electrode stimulation (4)
- if voltage is too high, can burn the patient. Must turn the duration(sweep) down
- Can injure nerve if stuck through the nerve
- if trying to stimulate erbs point or spinal accessory nerve, can give pt a pneumothorax
- increase infection risk
what are two advantages of stimulating with needle electrode?
- more precise localization of depolarization
2. can use less current or volts therefore less pain
Advantage of surface stimulation 2
- less chance of infection, but not zero
2. must use supramaximal stimulation to compare one study to the next.
Recording electrodes:
______: sumation of all electrodes in the area
______: cannot compare amplitude to amplitude but can compare latencies
surface
electrode (needle)
If pathology is proximal to the dorsal root ganglion, ____ will be normal
SNAP
In a motor NCS, active is placed _____ and reference is placed ______
belly of muscle (mid-portion)
something inert.
What is the problem if you first see a positive deflection on motor NCS (CMAP)
surface electrode is not over midpoint of muscle.
Motor latency is measured at ______ latency
onset
sensory latency is measured at _____
peak latency.
fastest axons will be seen at ______
onset latency
there is 13ms difference between fastest axon and others. This becomes more if pathological case. If axon is affected onset latency moves to the R.
Area under the negative spike =
of axons
All of the following occur prior to onset latency: (3)
The time required to achieve neuromuscular transmission and muscle action potential induction with subsequent CMAP appearance on the CRT is about 1ms determined by these things.
- latency of activation = 0.1msec
- neuroconduction
- NMJ transmission 1.0 msec
Most sensitive marker in demyelination process is _____
increase in negative spike duration
amplitude is measured :
peak to peak
Nerve conduction velocity:
Sensory:
Motor:
Sensory: distance/(OL - 0.1msec)
Motor: Motor study - NCV = distance/time.
Have to stimulate two points, distally and proximally.
Normal onset latency is _____ for upper extremity and ____ in lower
45m/sec, 40m/sec
On a motor study, the more proximal you go, you will get ______
physiologic temporal dispersion - every axon in the nerve doesn’t run at the same conduction velocity. If you’re more proximal, the potential spreads out more and they cancel each other out. The more proximal you go, you’ll lose amplitude. If the amplitude drops 50% that’s considered to be normal. Anything over 50% is abnormal
in physiologic temporal dispersion, amplitude ____ and duration _____
decreases, increases
______ occurs with turning up intensity and supramaximal stimulation does not occur
pseudofacilitation - if you do repetitive stimulation and the amplitude of the waveform gets bigger. There is better synchronizing of the motor units and it gets better with repetitive stimulation.
If you reach supramaximal stimulation and you get different morphology, its probably a ____ problem
NMJ
Which study is a pure sensory study
sural
What types of sensory NCS are there? (3)
- pure sensory - sural
- Pure sensory to mixed nerve
- Stim mixed nerve pick up over pure sensory.
in SNAP, orthodromic and antidromic studies are equal with respec to ____ and ____ but not in _____
onset and peak latency, amplitude.
Physiologic temporal dispersion is more pronounced in sensory nerves than motor nerves because: (2)
- SNAP negative spike duration is shorter than that for CMAP, resulting in less tolerance to asynchronous summation resulting in phase cancellation.
- the difference between the fastest fibers and the slowest fibers is mroe dramatic in sensory fibers. (more variation). The dispersion between the fastest and the slowest sensory nerves is twice that for motor nerves. In sensory nerves its 25m/sec. In motor its 13m/sec.
in SNAP, active and reference electrodes must be ____ cm apart. If less than that, what happens to amplitude?
4cm
decreases
(founded by 50m/s = (X/0.8ms)