Neuro- disorders of Equilibrium Flashcards

1
Q

what is equilibrium?

A

ability to maintain orientation in the body and its parts in relation to external space

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2
Q

what is disequilibrium? what is it confused with? what are the 2 ways it presents clinically?

A

inability to maintain orientation of the body, often confused w/ syncope/presyncope.
2 ways it presents: vertigo and ataxia

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3
Q

what is syncope?

A

light-headed, giddy, faint w.out illusion of movement

  • decreased supply of blood, O2 or glucose to brain
  • more vascular than neuro problem
  • presyncope –> syncope when LOC
  • “dizzy” is presyncope if not vertigo
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4
Q

how many adults will have syncope?

A

1/3

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5
Q

2 components of syncope

A
  • cardiac (more often ): mostly vasovagal: standing up, blood pools in legs, supposed to get reflex inc in HR and vasoconstriction so blood goes to the head. (carotid response to drop in BP)
  • neurologic: excess vagal stim, bradycardia, vasodilation - no blood to head.
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6
Q

what is orthostatic hypotension?

A

BP drops too much and cant get inc in HR fast enough

-in eldery, DM, on diuretics, alpha blockers, anticholinergics

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7
Q

what is vasomotor/vasovagal syncope?

A

most common type of syncope

-sudden inc vagal tone (stress or painful situation)

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8
Q

postmicurition (defecation) syncope

A
  • inc vagal tone from urination causes syncope

- defecation/constipation = inc intrabdominal pressure = carotid body stim = pass out

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9
Q

what does low vasal tone mean?

A

Vagal tone is a measure of cardiovascular function that facilitates adaptive responses to environmental challenge. Low vagal tone is associated with poor emotional and attentional regulation in children and has been conceptualized as a marker of sensitivity to stress

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10
Q

syncope vs seizure

A

syncope: no post-ictal state, only mild symptoms of disorientation, no confusion/fatigue

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11
Q

not well explained syncope…. what tests will you run?

A
  1. ECG (esp if it’s their first one)
  2. autonomic testing- tilt table test (looks for orthostatic hypotension)
  3. electrophysiologic studies- invasive, to see electricity of heart
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12
Q

Va state driving recommendations after syncope?

A

no driving 6 months, up to pt to report

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13
Q

what is ataxia? what do you need for a stable stance?

A

lack of coordinated movement

  • intact cerebellum, vestibular system, intact sensation (vision and proprioception)
  • cerebellum is most important component
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14
Q

vestibular ataxia.. what causes it and how do you test for it?

A

same lesions that cause peripheral vertigo- now have abnormal stance/gait

  • romberg test
  • mild vestibular ataxia w/ earache (pressure on middle ear –> pressure on inner ear)
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15
Q

what is cerebellar ataxia?

A

lesions of cerebellum or its connections

  • greatest abnormal movements w/ irregular rate, rhythm, amplitude or force of voluntary movements
  • cant stand eyes open or closed
  • wide gait
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16
Q

what is sensory ataxia?

A

lose proprioception = ataxia

  • deficit most often w/ bilateral peripheral nerves or posterior columns of spinal cord
  • romberg- close eyes and fall
  • decreased joint position and vibratory sense (steppage gait)
17
Q

3 abnormalities w/ cerebellar disease

A
  1. hypotonia: poor posture, limbs easily moved with small force
  2. incoordination: accel and deceleration of movement decreased, jerky appearance, see best in walking
  3. eye movement- nystagmus, gaze paralysis or dec. pursuit movements
18
Q

nystagmus with ataxia…

A
vestibular= nystagmus
cerebellar= usually w/ nystagmus
sensory = none
19
Q

vertigo is classified as …

A

peripheral or central- determines how you treat it

  • peripheral: inner ear or CN 8
  • central: brainstem or cerebellum (lesions)
20
Q

nystagmus w/ vertigo…peripheral vs central

A

peripheral- horizontal

central- may be vertical, unidirectional, multidirectional and may be different in each eye

21
Q

BPPV

A

otoliths in semiCs

  • always assoc. w/ horizontal nystagmus
  • txt: antiemetics, repositioning, habituation
22
Q

triad of menieres

A

vertigo, hearing loss, tinnitus

also…drop attacks when unable to stand (Ataxia)

23
Q

peripheral vs central vertigo

A

central: hypereflexive- inhibition is off , hearing loss rarely present, less severe vertigo

24
Q

what three things to ask the “dizzy” pt

A

how did it happen? when did it occur? describe the sensation…