Neuro (Marin's version) Flashcards
what is the onion layer from outer layer to inner?
propriception, proprioception/motor, motor, urinary continence, deep pain
whats the diffeence between disorentation, depressed, stuporus, and comatose
disorented: abnormak response to stimuli
depressed: decreasedresponse to normal stimuli
stuporus: eyes closed but they respond to being poked
comatose: poke them and they dont respond to noxious stimuli
if the dog is circling, they circle _____ the lesion
towards
ventroflexion of the neck indicates
metabolic issue: hypokalemia
difference between decerebrate, decerebellate, schiff sherington posture
decerebrate: everything is stiff, very bad
decerebellate: hind legs are not stiff
schiff sherrington: front legs and neck stiff, back legs flaccid and flexed, problem with T3-L3 segment (think IVDD)
whats the difference between sensory, cerebellar, and vestibular ataxia
sensory ataxia: weakness with swing and scuff
cerebellar: jerky and exaggerated
vestibular: drift, fall, roll, towards the side the head tilt is on
LMN can be _________
UMN can be ________
LMN: decreased or absent
UMN: present or increased
difference between a focal and generalized seizures?
focal: depends on a part of the brain, could be looking off into space, twitching, gone for a sec
generalized: more of a classic seizure, theyre “not with it”
what is myoclonus
muscle contracting/twitching
what is a tremor
twitching is irregular more all over and uneven, not just one msucle
what is myotinia
looks like worms wiggling under the muscles, usually actual muscle problems and not neuro
is this upper or lower motor neuron paresis:
- abnormal limb position, stiff, delayed protraction, spastic paresis, increased relfexes, increased resting muscle tone, late and mild muscle atrophy, slight resistance to limb movement
upper motor neuron
is this upper or lower motor neuron paresis:
- difficulty supporting body weight or collapsed, short strides, flaccid paralysis, decreased to absent reflexes, decreased or absent muscle tone, decreased resistance to limb movement, early and severe neurogenic atrophy
LMN
fill out the table for all the sections: C1-C5, C6-T2, T3-L3, L4-S3
consious proprioception forelimb:
consious proprioception hindlimb:
withdrawal reflex hind:
patellar relfex:
withdrawl reflexes forelimb:
other pathognmonic signs
6 yo doodle acutely dragging his back left leg, has no consious proprioception in this leg, but has normal reflexes. his spinal rads are normal. localization and ddx? treatment?
L4-S3
fibrocartilaginous embolism
id wanna do an MRI if available
tx: supportive care and time, can do physio, most improve in a few weeks but can take months