1 / 90

Neurology

Neurology. Chapter 64 Management of Patients with neurologic infection, autoimmune disorders and neuropathies. Meningitis. Pathophysiology Meningitis Infection/ inflammation of the meninges Encephalitis Infection/inflammation of the brain tissue. Meningitis. Pathophysiology

Télécharger la présentation

Neurology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Neurology Chapter 64 Management of Patients with neurologic infection, autoimmune disorders and neuropathies

  2. Meningitis • Pathophysiology • Meningitis • Infection/ inflammation of the meninges • Encephalitis • Infection/inflammation of the brain tissue

  3. Meningitis Pathophysiology • Meningitis/ encephalitis  • Infection  • Immune response  • Swelling/edema  • I –ICP  • Etc.

  4. Meningitis Is meningitis a disorder of the CNS, PNS or both? • CNS • PNS • Both CNS & PNS

  5. Meningitis The most common bacterial pathogens are: • Haemonphili influenzai • Affected kids < 5 yrs • H influenzae vaccine (Hib) • Streptococcus pneumoniae • Affects age 19-59 • Neisseria meningitides • Easily transmitted to others • Least lethal

  6. Meningitis Two ways the infectious agent can inter the meninges • Blood stream • Most common • Usually d/t URI • Direct extension • TBI • Invasive procedures

  7. Meningitis • The viral type of meningitis is usually • Self limiting • Benign • Bacterial meningitis is potentially • Fatal

  8. Meningitis Clinical manifestations • Onset: • Abrupt • General S&S • Nuchal rigidity • Positive Kernig's • Positive Brudzinski’s • Photophobia

  9. Meningitis Clinical Manifestations • S&S of infection • Fever • Chills

  10. Meningitis Clinical manifestations • S&S of I-ICP • H/A • i LOC • Vomiting • Papilledema • Hydrocephalus

  11. Meningitis Clinical manifestations • N. Meningitidis • Rash • Petechial • Purpuric lesion • Ecchymosis

  12. Meningitis Clinical manifestations • Infants/young children • Seizures • High-pitched cry • Bulging fontanels

  13. Meningitis • Mr. Jones has encephalitis. Would you expect his signs and symptoms to be more or les severe than a person with meningitis? • More severe • Less severe Encephalitis signs and symptoms are more severe with delirium & seizures.

  14. Meningitis Diagnosis • Lumbar tap • C&S of CSF • Positive Kernig’s • Positive Brudzinski

  15. Meningitis Treatment • Broad spectrum antibiotics • Penicillin • Cephalosporin's • Intrathecally • Early intervention crucial!

  16. Meningitis Nursing interventions • Isolation • ? Causative agent • Assessment • V/S • Neuro check • Cranial nerve involvement • Abn sleep patterns • Behavioral changes • ABG’s • Opisthotonus

  17. Meningitis Nursing management • I-ICP protocol • I&O • Quiet environment: Dark • Limit visitors • Nutrition • No constipation • Pad side rails • Emotional support • Alkalosis

  18. Meningitis Prevention • Haemonphilus vaccine • HiB • meningococcal conjugate vaccine • persons aged 11 to 55 years.  • designed to offer protection against four serogroups of Neisseria meningitidis (A, C, Y, W-135), which account for approximately 70 percent of cases in the United States. 

  19. Meningitis Complications • Thrombosis • i cerebral blood flow • Brain damage • Death

  20. Meningitis • What do bulging fontanel’s in an infant indicate? • What type of meningitis occurs most frequently and is considered the milder form? • What are the symptoms of meningitis? • To facilitate performing the lumbar puncture, on the patient who may have meningitis, it is best for the nurse to place the patient in what position? • After the lumbar puncture has been performed, it is best for the nurse to do

  21. Meningitis • What standard vaccine is administered to infants to prevent meningitis? • Identify the bacteria most commonly associated with meningitis • What is the most severe form of meningitis? • What affect does meningitis have of the physiology of the brain? • Name six signs and symptoms of bacteria meningitis • Is meningitis a disease of the CNS or PNS

  22. Brain Abscess Pathophysiology • A collection of infectious material within the tissue of the brain • Infection  • I-ICP  • Brain shift

  23. Brain Abscess 2 ways infection can enter the brain • Direct invasion • Spread from nearby sight • Sinuses • Ears • Teeth

  24. Tongue piercing causes brain abscess • 13 December 2001 New Scientist • Parents now have another reason to frown on tongue piercing - a potentially fatal brain abscess suffered by a young woman in Connecticut. • The woman's tongue became sore and swollen two or three days after it was pierced, and she reported a foul-tasting discharge from the pierced region. The infection healed in a few days after she removed the stud from her tongue, but a month later she suffered severe headaches, fever, nausea and vomiting. • A scan at the Yale University hospital revealed the brain abscess, which physicians drained. She recovered after six weeks of intravenous antibiotic treatment.

  25. Brain Abscess Clinical manifestations • I-ICP • Infection • Fever? • Sometimes • Sometimes not!

  26. Brain Abscess Diagnostic findings • CT • MRI

  27. Brain Abscess Medical Management • Antimicrobial therapy • Large IV doses • Surgery • Anti-convulsant

  28. Brain Abscess Nursing management • I-ICP protocol • Neuro assessment • Safety protocol • seizures

  29. Brain Abscess • Who is most at risk for brain abscesses? • Describe the medical treatment for a patient with a brain abscess? • Is a brain abscess a diseases of the CNS, PNS or both?

  30. Multiple Sclerosis Pathophysiology • Autoimmune disease • Demyelination of the myelin covering that protects the neurons of the brain and spinal cord

  31. Multiple Sclerosis • Demyelination • Destruction of the myelin sheath • Impaired transmission of nerve impulses • Both the axon & myelin are attacked

  32. Multiple Sclerosis • Is multiple sclerosis a disorder of the CNS, PNS or both? • CNS • PNS • Both CNS & PNS

  33. Multiple Sclerosis Etiology / Contributing factors • Unknown cause • Men vs women • Men < women • Age of onset • 20-40

  34. Multiple Sclerosis Clinical manifestations • Usually slow, progressive disease • Relapsing-remitting course • Patient may experience remission & exacerbation’s • Exacerbation of symptoms  • Partial/full remission  • Symptoms return

  35. Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Manifestations • Episodes of motor, visual or sensory disturbance • Visual disturbances • Diplopia • Blurred vision • Paresthesia • Fatigue • Dizziness

  36. Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Manifestations • Emotional disturbances • Scanning speech • Incontinence • Sexual disorders • Spasticity • Muscle hypertonicity

  37. Multiple Sclerosis Diagnosis • MRI • Sm. Plaque • Patches • CT scan • Lumbar puncture • Immunoglobulin abnormalities

  38. Multiple Sclerosis Medical management • No cure • Goal • Delay progress • Manage symptoms

  39. Multiple Sclerosis Pharmaceutical • Interferons • ABC&R

  40. Multiple Sclerosis Pharmaceutical • Skeletal muscle relaxants • Baclofen/lioresal • i transmission of impulses from the spinal cord to the skeletal muscle  • i spasticity • S/E • Drowsiness, weak

  41. Multiple Sclerosis Pharmaceutical • Corticosteriods • Immunosuppressants • Dexamethasone, prednisone • Action • Decreased imflammation • S/E • Poor wound healing • Na+ & H20 retention • h glucose levels

  42. Multiple Sclerosis Nursing Interventions • Individualized • B&B management • Avoid stress • Stress • Fatigue • Extreme temp. • Exercise • Fluids • Diet • High roughage

  43. Multiple Sclerosis Complications • Pneumonia • Decubitis ulcers • Contractures • Dependency

  44. Multiple Sclerosis • What is the pathophysiology of MS? • Is MS a disease of the CNS, PNS, or both? • Explain what demyelination refers to. • What role does temperature play in multiple sclerosis? • Identify 5 common signs and symptoms of MS.

  45. Multiple Sclerosis • What classifications of medications are used in treating MS? • What is the progression of multiple sclerosis • What is the most common symptom associated with MS? When does the individual usually seed medical help? • What can exacerbate MS? • What is a long term goal for a patient with MS?

  46. Myasthenia Gravis Pathophysiology • Auto-immune • Progressive disease • Remission & exacerbation • Flaw in transmission of impulses from the nerve to the muscle • Neuro-muscular junction • Most often affects the muscles regulated by the cranial nerves

  47. Myasthenia Gravis Pathophysiology • Specifically attacks receptors for acetylcholine  • Prevents muscle contraction  • Progressive weakness & fatigue

  48. Myasthenia Gravis • Is myasthenia Gravis a disorder of the CNS, PNS or both? • CNS • PNS • Both CNS & PNS

  49. Myasthenia Gravis Clinical manifestations • Onset • Gradual • Early • Ptosis • Diplopia • Progressive • May be fast or slow • With or without remission • Dysphonia • Difficulty chewing & swallowing • Extreme muscle weakness

  50. Myasthenia Gravis Clinical manifestations • Resp. paralysis (Bulbar paralysis) • Vital capacity • i • Resp. failure  • Deathmosis

More Related