NEUROLOGIC INVESTIGATIONS
NEUROLOGIC INVESTIGATIONS
CSF Analysis
CSF (general info):
• Produced by choroids plexus of ventricles, absorbed through villi of arachnoid granulations that project into the dural venous sinuses
• Production rate=.5 mL/min, total volume=150 mL, entire volume replaced every 5 hrs
Lumbar puncture:
• CI: space occupying lesion causing mass effect, increased ICP (LP can cause cerebral or cerebellar herniation)
• CT: should be performed prior to LP (except in cases of suspected meningitis)
• Complication: low pressure HA is most common (tx: pt should lie flat, increase liquid intake and caffeine)
• Technique:
o Pt position: lateral recumbent, legs flexed up over abdomen, pillow b/w legs
o Level: L3-4 vertebral interspace (@ level of anterior superior iliac spine); spinal cord ends at L1-2
o Needle: inserted w/ bevel facing up, directed slightly rostrally to coincide w/ downward angulation of spinous process
Interpretation of CSF findings:
• Normal CSF: clear, colorless fluid w/ glc content 2/3 that of blood, trace ptn, legs; severe dysarthria |extensor plantar responses, | |
| | | |impaired vibration and | |
| | | |position sense | |
|AD spinocerebellar |AD, inherited, onset in young |Insidious onset of progressive|Mild to moderate cognitive | |
|degenerations |adult life |impairment of gat and |decline is a late feature | |
| |D/t trinucleotide CAG |dysarthria in young adult life| | |
| |expansion | | | |
|Miller-Fisher Syndrome |Variant of Guillain-Barre |Triad of ataxia, areflexia, |IgG anti-GQ1b antibodies in |Self-limiting |
| |syndrome (mediated by |ophthalmoplegia |serum of >90% |Usually full recovery |
| |post-infectious immune | | | |
| |process) | | | |
Gait Disorders
|Gait Disorder |Anatomical Location |Description |Pathology |
|Hemiplegic |Brainstem |Affected leg is stiff and does not flex at hip; leg is circumducted,|Stroke, tumor, trauma |
| |Cerebral hemisphere |w/ tendency to scrape floor w/ toes; arm is held in flexion and | |
| | |adduction and does not swing freely; the spastic (paraparetic) gait | |
| |Spinal cord |is essentially that of a bilateral hemiplegia; adductor tone is | |
|Paraplegic | |increased, and legs tend to cross during walking (scissoring gait) |Demylination (MS), transverse |
| | | |myelitis, compressive myelopathy |
| | | | |
| |Bihemispheral | |Diffuse anoxic injury |
|Akinetic-rigid |Basal ganglia |Stooped posture; narrow-based, slow, shuffling gait w/ small steps |Parkinson’s Disease |
| | |and reduced arm swing; arms carried flexed and slightly ahead of | |
| | |body; difficulty w/ gait initiation; postural reflexes are impaired | |
| | |and pt may take series of rapid small steps (festination) forward | |
| | |(propulsion) or backward (retropulsion) in an effort to preserve | |
| | |equlibrium | |
|Frontal |Frontal lobes |Flexed posture; feet may be slightly apart; gait initiation is |Hydrocephalus, tumor, stroke, |
| | |impaired, and word “magnetic” describes difficulty lifting feet off |neurodegenerative d/o |
| | |ground; pt advances w/ small, shuffling, and hesitant steps; w/ | |
| | |increasing severity, pt may make abortive stepping movements in one | |
| |Subcortical |place w/o ability to move forward |Binswanger’s disease |
|Waddling |Hip-girdle weakness | |Muscular dystrophy, spi9nal muscular |
| | | |atrophy, acquired proximal myopathy |
|Sensory Ataxia |Large-fiber |D/t loss of proprioceptive input from feet; cautious, wide-based |Vitamin B12 deficiency |
|(Slapping) |neuropathy |gait; slow steps; contact w/ ground is made by heel and forefoot | |
| | |then strikes floor w/ a slapping sound (slapping gait); walking on | |
| |Dorsal columns |uneven surfaces or in dark is especially difficult |Tabes dorsalis |
URINARY AND SEXUAL DYSFUNCTION
URINARY
Anatomy/Physiology of Continence
|Circuit |Connections |Function |
|Circuit 1 |Dorsomedial frontal lobe to M region (pons) |Volitional control of micturition |
|Circuit 2 (spino-bulbar-spinal) |Reflex arc starting in bladder projecting to M region (pons) w/ | |
| |outflow connections to PNS sacral spinal motor nuclei | |
|Circuit 3 |Spinal segmental reflex arc w/ afferents from detrusor muscle to | |
| |pudendal nucleus and efferent fibers to striated sphincter muscles | |
• Pontine micturition center
o Areas
▪ M region stimulation( decrease in urethral pressure, then rise in detrusor muscle pressure and voiding; M region projects to sacral cord IML
▪ L region (same level) stimulation( contraction of urethral sphincter (storage)
o Damage( loss of inhibitory control over spinal reflexes (circuit 3) and as bladder distends, micturition reflex is automatically activated w/o pt’s awareness or control, and detrusor hyperreflexia and incontinence occurs
• Muscles of micturition
o Detrusor (smooth): PNS causes contraction; during filling it is inhibited, during micturition it is stimulated
o Internal urethral sphincter (smooth): SNS causes contraction; stim during filling, inh during micturition
o External urethral sphincter (skeletal): Somatic motor causes contraction; stim during filling, inh during mic
Evaluation of Incontinence
Urodynamic studies
• PVR (postvoid residual): normalM |Teen years |Unilateral or bilateral, |N/V, photophobia, phonophobia|Prophylaxis: avoid triggers, meds |
| | | |pulsing or throbbing |Aura is a transient focal |(beta-blockers like propranolol, |
|(w/ aura= ”classic”) (w/o | | | |neuro sx preceding HA; most |Ca++ channel blockers like |
|aura= ”common”) | | | |common type is visual |verapamil, TCAs like amitriptyline,|
| | | | |(flashing lights, zigzag |some anticonvulsants like depakote)|
| | | | |lines marching across visual |Abortive: simple analgesics like |
| | | | |field); develop over 5-20 |acetominophen, aspirin, NSAIDS, |
| | | | |min, and last 15 min-1 hr; HA|ergot alkaloids and selective 5-HT1|
| | | | |usually follows w/in 20-60 |agonists like sumatriptan |
| | | | |min and lasts 4-72 hrs | |
|Tension |F=M |Any age |Bilateral and occipital; pain |Muscle spasm may be involved |Many of those used for migraine |
| | | |is dull and bandlike, not | |Also, PT, stress management, |
| | | |throbbing | |biofeedback, psychotherapy |
|Cluster |M>>F |3rd decade |HAs occur in clusters in which |Ipsilateral conjunctival |Avoid possible precipitants (e.g. |
| | |of life |HA recur cyclically (3-4x/day |injection, lacrimation, nasal|EtOH, strenuous exercise) |
| | | |per cluster) followed by |congestion, and occasional |Verapamil for prophylaxis |
| | | |remission; each cluster lasts |Horner’s syndrome |Symptomatic tx includes inhalation |
| | | |up to several months and | |of pure oxygen (>90% effective); |
| | | |remission can be mo-yrs | |sumatriptan and dihydroergotamine |
| | | |Pain behind one eye or over | |can be used too |
| | | |lateral part of nose | | |
Secondary HAs
|HA Type |Etiology |Description |Associated Si/Sx |Diagnosis |Treatment |
|Subarachnoid |Nontraumatic: ruptured |Sudden, severe, “worst HA|LOC, vomiting, neck |LP or CT: look for |Acute control of BP for |
|Hemorrhage |aneurysm, bleeding from A-V|of my life” |stiffness |evidence of |adequate brain perfusion, |
| |malformation | | |hemorrhage or heme |monitoring for vasospasm and |
| | | | |b/d in CSF |acute obstructive |
| | | | | |hydrocephalus d/t |
| | | | | |subarachnoid blood |
| | | | | |Definitive tx: surgical |
| | | | | |resection or clipping of |
| | | | | |aneurysm |
|Temporal Arteritis |Subacute granulomatous |Occurs in elderly, |Scalp tenderness, jaw |Elevated ESR to 100 |Prednisone in decreasing |
|(Giant Cell |inflammatory condition |unilateral or bilateral, |pain during chewing (jaw |Definitive dx made by|doses for several months and |
|Arteritis) |involving branches of |over temporal arteries |claudication), |temporal artery |then continued for next 1-2 |
| |external carotid artery, | |involvement of ophthalmic|biopsy demonstrating |yrs |
| |esp. temporal arteries | |artery can lead to |vasculitis | |
| | | |blindness | | |
|Trigeminal Neuralgia|Microvascular compression |Facial pain syndrome in | | |Carbamazepine |
|(Tic Douloureux) |of trigeminal nerve |which brief severe | | | |
| | |electrical shock-like | | | |
| | |pains occur in | | | |
| | |distribution of a branch | | | |
| | |of CNV (2 and 3 most | | | |
| | |common); most common in | | | |
| | |middle age and elderly; | | | |
| | |can be precipitated by | | | |
| | |movement, a cold breeze, | | | |
| | |or tactile stimulation in | | | |
| | |a trigger zone | | | |
|Idiopathic |A/w obesity |Women in 2-4th decades of | |Bilateral visual sxs:|Acetazolamide (CA inhibitor):|
|Intracranial HTN | |life | |fleeting loss of |inhibits CSF formation |
|(Pseudotumor | | | |visual acuity, |Furosemide |
|Cerebri) | | | |scotoma, double |Oral steroids |
| | | | |vision, perhaps |Serial LP to decrease CSF |
| | | | |papilledema |pressure |
| | | | |CT/MRI normal |If tx is ineffective, pts may|
| | | | |LP shows increased |be left w/ permanent visual |
| | | | |pressure >250 mm |loss |
| | | | |water | |
|Post-Lumbar Puncture|Following LP |HA in an upright position | | |IV caffeine sodium benzoate |
|or Low-Pressure HA | |starting w/in 48 hrs of LP| | |Blood patch |
| | |and resolving in several | | | |
| | |days w/o tx; HA relieved | | | |
| | |when lying down | | | |
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