Neurology Falcon Review 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the types of parenchymal injuries

A

Concussion
contusion
diffuse axonal injury

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2
Q

Define concussion

A

Clinical syndrome of altered mental status secondary to head injury typically brought about by a change in momentum of the head

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3
Q

What are some of the symptoms of a concussion

A

Instantaneous onset of transient neurologic dysfunction, including loss of consciousness, temporary respiratory arrest, and loss of reflexes

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4
Q

Define contusion

A

Direct parenchymal injury to brain

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5
Q

What are the two types of contusions

A

Coup injury

Contracoup injury

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6
Q

What is a coup injury

A

Cerebral injury at point of direct contact

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7
Q

What is a Contracoup injury

A

damage to brain surface opposite to point of impact

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8
Q

What is a diffuse axonal injury

A

Injury to white matter due to acceleration and deceleration
– generally located in the corpus callosum, periventricular white matter, and hippocampus
– cerebral and cerebellar peduncle

typically associated with axonal swelling of white matter and is associated with a poor prognosis

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9
Q

What is the most common cause of an epidural hematoma

A

Trauma to skull causing an epidural artery tear (middle meningeal artery)
– patient may experience a lucid interval lasting upto a few hours

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10
Q

What are the deficits associated with an epidural hematoma

A

– Contralateral hemiparesis

– ipsilateral pupillary dilation

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11
Q

What is the most common cause of a Subdural hematoma

A

Tearing of bridging veins
– most common intracerebral lesions and dramatic brain injury

greatest risk is involved with:
– brain atrophy
– coagulopathy (alcoholics)

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12
Q

Do epidural hematomas require drainage

A

Always

– subdural hematomas to not always require drainage

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13
Q

What are the symptoms of a spinal cord transection

A

– Upper motor neuron signs below the level of the lesion
– complete sensory loss below the level
– bowel and bladder dysfunction
– may see lower motor neuron signs at the level of the lesion

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14
Q

What is a brown-Sequard syndrome

A

– Ipsilateral-weakness, joint positions sensory loss
– contralateral-pain and temperature loss
– bowel and bladder dysfunction is rare

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15
Q

What are the causes for central cord syndrome

A

Tumor

syringomyelia

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16
Q

What is syringomyelia

A

– Fluid filled cavity within the spinal cord
– most commonly occur in the cervical cord
– can occur after trauma
– can occur in conjunction with chiari malformation

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17
Q

What is the symptoms of a central cord syndrome

A

– Loss of pain and temperature in a cape like distribution
– lower motor neuron signs and arms
– upper motor neuron signs of lower extremities
– generally spares the dorsal columns

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18
Q

Discuss an anterior spinal artery syndrome

A

– Rear
– infarction of anterior two thirds of cord
–affects spinothalamic and corticospinal tracts, sparing dorsal columns
– results in spastic paralysis and loss of pain and temperature sensation with intact joint position since and vibration

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19
Q

what cranial nerves are associated with pain sensitive fibers

A

V
IX
X

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20
Q

Does the brain parenchyma have pain fibers

A

No

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21
Q

What is the most useful symptom regarding clinical approach to headaches

A

Time course is the most useful

– quality, severity and location have significant overlap between headache etiologies

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22
Q

What are the signs and symptoms of a subarachnoid hemorrhage

A

– Thunderclap headache - instantaneous onset, with maximal intensity within minutes
– worst headache of my life
– severe nausea and vomiting is common
– altered level of consciousness is frequent
– may have focal neurologic deficits

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23
Q

Discuss intraparenchymal hemorrhage

A

Acute onset
focal deficits commonly occur simultaneously
altered level of consciousness is related to the location and size of the bleed

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24
Q

how does a headache associated with meningitis typically present

A

Bacterial meningitis:
– headache is usually diffuse
– fever and meningismus are typical

viral meningitis
– diffuse headache usually has developed over several days
– associated symptoms of fatigue and myalgias are common

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25
How is the headache associated with temporal arteritis
– headache is typically intermittent, unilateral, and temporal at first, then bilateral temporal, then continuous – Pain is often throbbing in nature, but also described as aching or burning – tenderness of the scalp
26
What is the typical patient presentation for a headache associated with temporal arteritis
Usually women over the age of 60 firm and tender superficial temporal artery elevated ESR
27
What is the treatment for temporal arteritis
Steroids until biopsy is negative | – may be continued for years to prevent recurrence
28
how will a patient with a headache due to hypertensive urgency present
Dull, bilateral ache and pain no focal deficits usually seen with BP >170/110
29
What is RPLS
Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy | – high blood pressure leading to posterior demyelination in the brain
30
Discuss cluster headaches
Typically abrupt and onset, peeking over 5 to 10 minutes. Persist for 45 minutes to 2 hours clusters over days two weeks consistently unilateral, orbital location Nausea and vomiting are atypical
31
Who is generally affected by cluster headaches
Typically young adult men onsets in the third decade | male-female ratio 5:1
32
What is a treatment for cluster headache
``` Abortive therapy is often ineffective but can use: – sumatriptan – DHE – oxygen – intranasal lidocaine ``` Prophylactic therapy – lithium – valproic acid – amitriptyline
33
Describe the headache that is associated with a venous sinus thrombosis
An abrupt onset headache that lingers | often diffuse, may localize near the vertex
34
What is the diagnosis and management of venous sinus thrombus
MRI to define | IV heparin followed by oral anticoagulation
35
What is the major difference between a classic migraine in common migraine
A classic migraine has a preceding neurologic symptom (aura) common migraines or more likely to be bilateral
36
What is the treatment for migraine
``` Abortive therapy – triptans – IV ergotamine (status migrainnosis) – caffeine – NSAIDs ``` Preventive therapy – avoid triggers – treat attacks early – tricyclic antidepressants
37
What is the mechanism of triptan's
Serotonin 5 HT-1D antagonists | – may cause chest pain and facial flushing
38
What is the pseudotumor cerebi
A.k.a. idiopathic intracranial hypertension – headache is described as a diffuse, dull, ache or pressure sensation – onset is gradual but often progressive – worsened by laying down in my physical activity – horizontal diplopia is occasionally seen
39
Discuss the epidemiology of pseudotumor cerebri
75% of patients are female 20 to 40 years of age majority are obese can be associated with drugs (steroid, vitamin A toxicity, tetracycline)
40
How's a diagnosis pseudotumor cerebri made
Imaging to rule out mass lesion | LP to document opening pressure (elevated)
41
What is the treatment for pseudotumor cerebri
Lumbar puncture weight loss carbonic anhydrase inhibitor shunts
42
How do carbonic anhydrase inhibitors (acetazolamide) benefit pseudotumor cerebri
Decreased CSF production
43
how are headaches associated with brain tumors
No classic headache syndrome defines a tumor usually insidious onset worse in the morning or wakens patient at night due to raised ICP
44
Discuss tension headaches
Most common variant of headaches – May limits, but not prohibit activities – usually bilateral, within a occipital-temporal-frontal "band like" distribution – tenderness in the cervical paraspinals and temporalis muscles – typically respond to OTC analgesics
45
Was the prophylactic treatment for tension headaches
Tricyclic antidepressants arefirst line
46
What is chronic daily headaches
Typically involves out of tension type headaches associated with analgesic abuse – cessation of analgesic use as first line treatment followed by tricyclic antidepressants
47
What is trigeminal neuralgia
Tic doulaureaux – electric, shooting pain lasting seconds – neuralgia of cranial nerve V – triggered by non-noxious sensory stimuli to the affected face
48
What headaches are associated with an increased risk of suicide
Cluster headaches | trigeminal neuralgia
49
What is the treatment for trigeminal neuralgia
Carbamazepine or oxcarbamazepine – may be combined with baclofen surgical intervention – decompression of trigeminal nerve
50
What are the AHS guidelines for imaging for headaches
– New onset headache inpatient over 40 – headache with abnormal neurologic exam – reassure and anxious patient CT useful only in ER situations suspected of SAH MRI brain is the study of choice to rule out tumor
51
What is epilepsy
Tendency to experience recurrent unprovoked seizures – 10% of the population will have a seizure in their lifetime. 30% chance of a future second seizure – 1% have epilepsy
52
What are generalized seizures
A seizure which affects the entire brain at once – primary generalization – secondary generalization (begins locally then spreads to entire brain)
53
What is a partial seizures
A seizure which originates in one area of the brain. May secondarily generalized
54
What differentiates a simple partial seizure from a complex partial seizure
Simple partial seizures have no loss of consciousness. Associated with positive neurologic symptoms Complex partial seizures has impaired consciousness. Associated with automatism's
55
What is a generalized tonic clonic seizure
Grand mal seizure – tonic extension of all four extremities followed by chronic jerking – Todd's paralysis is common
56
What is an absence seizure
Generalized seizure characterized by unresponsive staring lasting several seconds followed by immediate recovery – typically seen in childhood
57
Discuss febrile seizures
Most common cause of new onset seizures in children – six months to five years of age – occur in the setting of a febrile illness without evidence of intracranial infection – typically generalized at onset – generally are benign
58
What is done in the workup for a first non-febrile seizure
History and physical EEG lab work neuroimaging
59
What is benign Rolandic epilepsy
– childhood onset – Simple partial seizure involving mouth and face, maybe generalized tonic clinic – Nocturnal preponderance of seizures – EEG findings: Centrotemporal spikes – Treatment: generally no treatment needed, carbamazepine if necessary
60
What is Lennox-Gastaut syndrome
– childhood to early adolescence – All types of seizures – Associated with mental retardation – EEG findings: slow (1 to 2 Hz spike and wave), proximal fast activity, multifocal spikes – All anti-epileptic drugs
61
What is Absence Epilepsy
– childhood and adolescence – Absence, may generalized tonic clonic – Hyperventilation's often a trigger. May outgrow seizures – EEG findings: 3 Hz spike-and-wave – Treatment ethosuximide; valproate if it generalizes
62
What is juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME)
– adolescents and young adults – Myoclonic, absence, generalized tonic clonic seizures – Early-morning predominance of seizures. Triggers include sleep deprivation and alcohol use – EEG findings: 4 to 6 Hz spike-and-wave. Frequent photo paroxysmal response (strobe light activation of seizures)
63
Was the most common cause of adult epilepsy
Adults – idiopathic is most common – medial temporal lobe sclerosis – tumors are more common cause in adults than in children Elderly – stroke is the most common – metabolic disturbances (calcium, sodium, magnesium) – UTI – medication related (benzodiazepine withdrawal)
64
When this treatment indicated for seizures
After the second unprovoked seizure
65
Were the common anti-epileptic drugs
``` Phenytoin carbamazepine valproic acid phenobarbital ethosuximide gabapentin lamotrigine tiagabine topiramate zonisamide felbamate levetiracetam ```
66
Discuss phenytoin
– Na channel blocker – Used for partial, generalized seizures – Side effects: gingival hyperplasia, coarsening of facial features
67
Discuss carbamazepine
– Na channel blocker – used for Partial, generalized seizures. May worsen myoclonus and absence seizures – Side effects: hyponatremia, agranulocytosis
68
discuss valproic acid
– Na channel blocker, GABA receptor agonist – Used for partial, generalized, absence – Side effects: weight gain, tremor, hair loss, hepatotoxicity, thrombocytopenia
69
Discuss phenobarbital
– GABA receptor agonist – Used for partial, generalized seizures – Side effects: sedation, mild addiction potential
70
Discussed ethosuximide
– T type Ca channel blocker – Used for absence seizures – Side effects: G.I. symptoms
71
Discuss gabapentin
– manipulates GABA pathway – Used for partial seizures – Side effects: sedation, ataxia, weight gain at high doses
72
Discuss lamotrigine
– Na channel blocker, glutamate receptor antagonist – Use for partial, generalized seizures – Side effects: Stevens-Johnson's syndrome with rapid titration
73
Discuss tiagabine
– GABA reuptake inhibitor – Used for partial seizures – Side effects: sedation
74
Discuss topiramate
– mechanism unknown – Used for partial, generalized seizures – Side effects: weight loss, cognitive difficulty, renal stones (skinny and stupid)
75
Discuss zonisamide
– T-type Ca channel blocker, inhibits glutamate release – Used for partial, generalized seizures – Side effects: weight loss, drowsiness, ataxia at high doses, renal stones
76
Discuss felbamate
– unknown mechanism – Used for partial, generalized seizures – Side effects: weight loss, insomnia, aplastic anemia, liver failure
77
Discuss levetiracetam
– Unknown mechanism – Used for partial, generalized seizures – Side effects: somnolence, asthenia, dizziness, akasthesia
78
What is the problem with epilepsy in pregnancy
Untreated women have a higher risk of birth defects All AED's are potentially teratogenic. Risk can be minimized by taking 1 mg folate PO Q day
79
What is the treatment for status epilepticus
1. ABCs, ABG, IV access 2. Benzodiazepines 3. Phenytoin if status continues 4. Intubate, phenobarbital 20 MG/KG IV to induce a coma
80
What is meningitis
Inflammation of the leptomeninges and cerebrospinal fluid within subarachnoid space
81
What is meningoencephalitis
Inflammation of the meninges and the brain parenchyma
82
What are the causes of meningitis
1. Infectious – bacterial, viral, mycobacterial, spirochete, fungal, parasitic 2. Chemical 3. Neoplastic
83
With the CSF findings for acute bacterial meningitis
Wbc's >1000 neutrophils >50 glucose 100
84
Where the CSF findings for acute fungal or viral meningitis
Wbc's 100-500 neutrophils <50 glucose normal (40) protein 50-100
85
What a CSF findings for acute HSV encephalopathy
Wbc's 10-1000 neutrophils 30 protein >75
86
What are the common bacterial pathogens for meningitis in a patient less than one month
Group B strep E. coli Listeria Klebsiella
87
What is the treatment for bacterial meningitis in a patient less than one month
Ampicillin + cefotaximine
88
Were the common bacterial pathogens for meningitis in a patient 1 month to 23 months of age
``` Strep pneumonia N. meningitidis group B strep H influenza E. coli ```
89
What is the treatment for bacterial meningitis in a patient's 1 month to 23 months of age
Vancomycin and a third-generation cephalosporin
90
Were the common bacterial pathogens for bacterial meningitis in a patient 2-50 years old
N. Meningitidis | strep pneumoniae
91
What is the treatment for bacterial meningitis in a patient's 2-50 years old
Vancomycin plus a third-generation cephalosporins
92
What are the common bacterial pathogens for meningitis in a patient >50 years old
Strep pneumoniae N. Meningitidis Listeria aerobic gram-negative bacilli
93
What is the treatment for bacterial meningitis in a patient's >50 years old
Vancomycin plus third-generation cephalosporin plus ampicillin
94
What are the etiologies associated with acute viral meningitis
Non-polio enteroviruses (85%) – Echovirus – coxsackievirus Arboviruses (5%) – Eastern equine encephalitis – Western equine encephalitis – St. Louis encephalitis Herpes family viruses (4%)
95
For the spirochetes that can cause meningitis
Treponema Borrelia Leptospira
96
What is the Argyle-Robertson pupil
No direct or consensual light response, but pupils constrict with accommodation
97
What diagnostic testing is done for neurosyphilis
Non-Treponema antigen test – R PR or VDRL Treponema antigen test – FTA-ABS
98
What diseases caused by the spirochete Borrelia burgdorferi
Lyme disease
99
What is the treatment for Lyme disease
Amoxicillin or doxycycline
100
Were the common fungal organisms associated with meningoencephalitis
``` Cryptococcus neoformans coccidoides immitis Candida albicans Mucor Aspergillus fumigatus Histoplasma capsulatum Blastomyces dermatiitidis ```
101
What is the most common fungal infection of the CNS
Cryptococcus meningoencephalitis
102
Discuss Cryptococcus meningoencephalitis
– typically in the immuno compromised – inhalation of spores from soil and pigeon excrement – increased intracranial pressure leading to a protean headache – CSF: very low glucose, elevated protein
103
What is the treatment for Cryptococcus meningoencephalitis
Amphotericin B, flucytosine, fluconazole
104
Were the common parasitic organisms that lead to meningoencephalitis
``` Toxoplasmosis Cysticercosis and echinococcosis malaria amebiasis trypanosomiasis ```
105
What was CT and MRI demonstrate for a patient with cerebral toxoplasmosis
Multiple ring enhancing lesions – similar findings with CNS lymphoma, tuberculosis, or fungal infections Toxois the most common calls for a cerebral mass lesion in a patient with AIDS
106
What is the treatment for toxoplasmosis
Pyrimethamine, sulfadiazine and folinic acid
107
What is the most common parasitic infection of the CNS worldwide
Neuro-cysticercosis – caused by the pork tapeworm Taenia solum – brain involvement in 50 to 70% of cases
108
What will imaging demonstrated for Neuro cysticercosis
Ring enhancing cystic lesions (active cyst) Parenchymal calcifications (old cyst) Vasogenic edema
109
What is the treatment for Neuro cysticercosis
Albendazole to kill the parasite
110
What is leptomeningeal carcinomatosis
Diffuse seating of leptomeninges with metastatic tumor cells Occurs in breast cancer, small cell lung cancer, melanoma, medulloblastoma, PNET tumors (primary Neuro ectodermal tumors)
111
What is encephalitis
Infection of the brain parenchyma | – leads to confusion, delirium, focal neurologic deficits, seizures and coma
112
What are the common etiologies to encephalitis
Arboviruses Enteroviruses herpes simplex virus CMV, EBV, VZV
113
Discuss HSV encephalitis
Most common in children and young adults – presents with alteration in mood, memory, and behavior – involves inferior and medial regions of temporal lobes and orbital gyri of frontal lobes – often hemorrhagic – Cowdrey intra-nuclear viral inclusion bodies
114
What is the most accurate diagnostic procedure for HSV encephalitis
CSF HSV PCR
115
What is progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
A viral encephalitis caused by polyomavirus (JC virus) – virus preferentially infects oligodendrocytes which leads to demyelination – PML does not enhance on MRI
116
What are the transmissible spongiform encephalopathies
``` Creuzfeldt-Jakob disease – new variant CJD (mad cow) Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker syndrome fatal familial insomnia Kuru ``` All associated with abnormal forms of a specific protein (prion protein) which is infectious and transmissible
117
Discuss the pathogenesis of prion diseases
– Prion protein is usually a normal protein in neurons. – The prion protein undergoes conformational change from Alpha helix to beta pleated sheet – prion protein acquires relative resistance to digestion with proteases – infectious nature comes from ability to corrupt the integrity of normal cellular components – leads to a buildup in neurons
118
What are the clinical features of Creufeldt-Jakob disease
– Rapidly progressive dementia – peak incidence in seventh decade – iatrogenic transmission possible with transplants – subtle changes in memory and behavior followed by rapidly progressive dementia with involuntary jerking muscle contractions (myoclonus)