Neurological Dysfunction Flashcards
Homonymous hemianopia
Visual field blindness -Either the two right or the two left halves of the visual fields of both eyes. Results from damage to the optic nerves.
Astereognosis
Inability to identify common objects through touch alone
Oculogyric crisis
Eyeballs are in a fixed position, can last for a minutes or hours. Response to antipsychotic medications.
Can a person talk while the gag reflex is absent?
Speech maybe normal without a gag reflex.
What kind of strokes could cause aphasia?
Lobar strokes in the cerebral hemispheres
Cataract surgery postop
Pain should not be present. Pain might mean hyphema (clouding in the anterior chamber) and infection.
Blurred vision glare and itching may be present.
No need to limit sodium intake.
Causes of cataracts
Besides advancing age, cataract risk factors include:
Ultraviolet radiation
Diabetes, Hypertension, Obesity, Smoking, Prolonged use of corticosteroids, Statins, HRT,
Significant alcohol consumption,High myopia,
Family history
Previous eye injury, inflammation or surgery
(NOT caused by rubella during pregnancy, increased intraocular pressure or strep throat)
What kind of med is used frequently for increased intracranial pressure?
What are other uses for the med?
Osmotic diuretic (mannitol) increases the pressure gradient, drawing fluid from intracellular to intravascular spaces.
Reduces intraocular pressure, prevents acute tubular necrosis and draws water into the vascular system to increase blood pressure.
It increases the pressure gradient in renal tubules thus increasing urine output.
What kind of metabolic problem can be caused by increased ICP?
Diabetes insipidus can be caused by increased intracranial pressure and head trauma.
Urine output of 300 mL per hour, low specific gravity, increased serum osmolarity and dehydration.
hypophysectomy:
surgical removal of the pituitary gland. The procedure may be done for cancerous or noncancerous tumors.
Post op: observe for hemorrhage.
Guillain-Barre syndrome
Ascending paralysis
Post viral illness
Cause of Multiple Sclerosis.
How is it diagnosed?
Loss of myelin sheath
Lumbar puncture showing increased gamma globulin level.
Cause of Myasthenia gravis
Autoimmune
Caused by destruction of acetylcholine receptors
Can be triggered by stress or pregnancy
Cause of Parkinson’s
Basal ganglia can’t produce sufficient dopamine
Early and late signs of myasthenia gravis
Early: ptosis (drooping eyelid) and diplopia
Late: dysphasia and respiratory distress
Glaucoma symptoms
Blurred vision
Central vision loss
maybe no symptoms
Treatment for glaucoma won’t restore vision but will stop progression.
Spinal cord injury at thoracic level causes what?
Injury at C6 would be probable what?
C4?
Thoracic- paraplegia
C6- most likely quadriplegia
C5- might need ventilation, but may resolve it time
C4- ventilation necessary
Neurogenic shock symptoms:
Hypotension Bradycardia Warm,dry skin flaccid paralysis Symptoms are caused due to loss of adrenergic stimulation below level of lesion.
What is Autonomic dysreflexia?
syndrome in which there is a sudden onset of excessively high blood pressure. It is more common in people with spinal cord injuries that involve the thoracic nerves of the spine or above (T6 or above).
Symptoms of autonomic dysreflexia:
Anxiety, flushing above the level of the lesion,
piloerection (goosebumps), hypertension, bradycardia, sweating.
Nursing considerations with autonomic dysreflexia
Usually caused by stimuli such as full bladder, fecal impaction, or pressure ulcer.
Lying flat will cause BP to increase more. High Fowler’s is best.
Indwelling Catheter should be assessed immediately after the head of the bed is raised in the patient with autonomic dysreflexia.
Symptoms of intracranial pressure
headache nausea vomiting increased blood pressure decreased mental abilities confusion about time, and then location and people as the pressure worsens double vision pupils that don’t respond to changes in light shallow breathing seizures loss of consciousness coma Bradycardia, widening pulse pressure, bradypnea
Dysarthria
Garbled speech
Uses for Gardner-Wells tongs
Used to reduce dislocations, supplications, pain, spasm in cervical spinal cord injuries.
NOT used to reduce ICP, prevent DVT or improve neurologic outcome.
How do you test Cardinal fields of vision?
Having the client follow an object up, down, obliquely, and horizontally
What is legal blindness
Visual acuity of 20/150
What is global aphasia and what causes it?
Results from damage to Broca’s and Wernicke’s area.
Combination of receptive and expressive aphasia. Brain’s communication is damaged.
Cause of expressive aphasia.
What is it?
Damage to Broca’s area, located in frontal lobe.
Difficulty expressing themselves in speech is slow and labored. Still able to comprehend written and verbal communication.
What is cause of receptive aphasia?
What is it?
Results from damage to Warnicke’s area.(Located in Temporel lobe)
can’t comprehend written or verbal communication.
Speech is normal but they convey information poorly.
Sign of basilar skull fracture.
CSF seepage from ears and nose.
After TBI, how often do you do neuro Glasgoma assessment?
What is HOB for TBI?
Neuro assess q 15 min.
HOB 30 degrees
Bell’s palsy:
Which cranial nerve is affected?
What is treatment?
Cranial nerve 7
Prednisone is treatment
What is charcots neuro triad?
- Nystagmus
- Intention tremor
- Staccato
although these three signs are indicative of multiple sclerosis, they are not definitive of the diagnosis.