Neurology: Nerve Degeneration Flashcards
What are featuresof motor neuron disease?
- Neurological condition of unknown cause which can present with both upper and lower motor neuron signs.
- Rarely presents before 40 years and various patterns of disease are recognised including amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, progressive muscular atrophy and bulbar palsy
How does Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis present?
- Affects both upper (corticospinal tracts) and lower motor neurons
- Results in a combination of upper and lower motor neuron signs
What are signs and symptoms of Motor Neuron Disease?
- Fasciculations
- Absence of sensory signs/symptoms (vague sensory symptoms may occur early in the disease e.g. limb pain but ‘never’ sensory signs)
- Mixture of lower motor neuron and upper motor neuron signs
- Wasting of the small hand muscles/tibialis anterior is common
- Doesn’t affect external ocular muscles
- No cerebellar signs
- Abdominal reflexes are usually preserved and sphincter dysfunction if present is a late feature
What are investigations for Motor Neuron Disease?
Diagnosis of motor neuron disease is clinical
- Nerve Conduction Studies: show normal motor conduction and can help exclude a neuropathy.
- Electromyography: Shows a reduced number of action potentials with increased amplitude.
- MRI: Performed to exclude the differential diagnosis of cervical cord compression and myelopathy
What is Duchenne muscular dystrophy?
- Duchenne muscular dystrophy there is a frameshift mutation in Dystrophin gene resulting in one or both of the binding sites responsible for sturcture or binding of muscles
- Progressive proximal muscle weakness from 5 years
What are signs and symptoms of Duchenne’s Muscular dystrophy?
- Calf pseudohypertrophy
- Gower’s sign: child uses arms to stand up from a squatted position
- 30% of patients have intellectual impairment
What are Dystronopathies?
- X-linked recessive due to mutation in the gene encoding dystrophin, dystrophin gene on Xp21.
- Dystrophin is part of a large membrane associated protein in muscle which connects the muscle membrane to actin, part of the muscle cytoskeleton
- Includes Becker Muscular Dystrophy and Duchenne’s Muscular Dystrophy
How can diabetes causes Neuropathies?
- High blood sugar can injure nerves throughout your body and mostly damages nerves in your legs and feet. It can be disabling and quite painful
- May affect as many as 50% of people with diabetes
What are symptoms of Diabetic Neuropathy?
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Peripheral Neuropathy
- Numbness and reduced ability to feel pain or temperature changes
- Tingling or burning sensation
- Sharp pains or cramps
- Increased sensitivity to touch
- Serious foot problems such as ulcer, infections and bone/join pain
-
Autonomic neuropathy
- Lack of aware of low blood sugar levels
- Bladder or bowel problems
- Slow stomach emptying causing nausea, vomiting and loss of apetite
- Changes in the way your eyes adjust from light to dark
- Decreased sexual response
-
Proximal neuropathy (diabetic polyradiculopathy)
- Severe pain in hip, thigh or buttock
- Eventual weak and shrinking thigh muscle
- Difficulty rising from sitting position
- Severe stomach pain
-
Mononeuropathy (focal neuropathy)
- Difficulty focusing or double vision
- Aching behind one eye
- Paralysis on one side of your dace (bell’s palsy)
- Numbness or tingling in your hand or fingers except your little finger
- Weakness in your hand that may cause you to drop things
What are the risk factors of Diabetic Neuropathy?
- Poor blood sugar control
- Diabetes history
- Kidney disease: leads to toxin in blood damaging nerves
- Being overweight: increase risk of diabetic neuropathy
- Smoking: narrows and hardens arteries reducing blood flow to legs and feet
What are complications of Diabetic Neuropathy?
- Hypoglycaemia unawareness
- Loss of toe, foot or leg
- Urinary tract infections and urinary incontinence
- Sharps drops in blood pressure
- Digestive problems
- Sexual dysfunction
- Increased or decreased sweating
How is Diabetic Neuropathy prevented?
- Blood sugar management
- Foot care
- Check your feet everyday
- Keep your feat clean and dry
- Moisturize your feet
- Trim your toenails carefully
- Wear clean and dry socks
- Wear cushioned shoes that fit well
What is the causes of Subacute combined degenration of spinal cord?
- Combined cord and peripheral nerve damage is sequel of Addisonian pernicious anaemia and rarely other causes of B12 deficiency.
- Nitrous oxide abuse may cause functional B 12 deficiency.
What are symptoms and signs of Subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord?
- Numbness and tingling of fingers and toes
- Distal sensory loss particularly of the posterior column
- Absent ankle jerks
- Cord involvement leading to exaggerated knee jerks and extensor plantar
- Optic atrophy
- Retinal haemorrhage
- Sphincter disturbance, severe generalized weakness and dementia may develop in later stages
What are investigations of subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord?
- Activated vitamin B12 , methylmalonic acid and homocysteine levels should be checked.
- Macrocytosis with megaloblastic marrow