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Overview

The Neurologic Exam Andy Jagoda, MD Department of Emergency Medicine Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York, New York. Overview. Neuroanatomy History Physical Clinical Scenarios. Introduction. Facilitates communication Provides baseline Directs testing

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Overview

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  1. The Neurologic ExamAndy Jagoda, MDDepartment of Emergency MedicineMount Sinai School of MedicineNew York, New York

  2. Overview • Neuroanatomy • History • Physical • Clinical Scenarios

  3. Introduction • Facilitates communication • Provides baseline • Directs testing • Identifies need for life-saving therapies • Risk management

  4. Risk Management: Case #1 • A 46-year-old female with a long history of migraine headaches presented c/o a severe occipital HA that was different from her past headaches in location and intensity. Neuro exam “WNL”. Patient was treated with Compazine, 10 mg IV, with “resolution of headache” and discharged home to “follow-up With PMD”. • 18 hours later, patient was brought in by EMS comatose

  5. Risk Management: Case #2 • A 64-year-old male presented with lower back pain which had become progressively worse over the past 2 weeks. The pain was primarily in the lower back without radiation, with nonspecific numbness in the legs. PMH: presently being treated for prostatitis. Exam: “mild paralumbar tenderness”, “SLR -”, “Motor / Sensory Intact”, Knee DTR +2. Patient was prescribed Motrin and told to follow-up with his PMD. • Patient developed irreversible renal damage.

  6. Cauda Equina Syndrom • Injury to lumbosacral roots • Variable sensorimotor deficits and bowel and bladder function • Conus medullaris: s3-5: saddle anesthesia, sphincter loss, intact LE motor/sensory

  7. Neuroanatomy

  8. Michelangelo

  9. Michelangelo

  10. Neuroanatomy • Central versus peripheral • symmetrical vs asymmetrical • If central, what is the level: • Cerebrum • Midbrain • Spinal cord • If peripheral, is it • Nerve • Muscle • NMJ

  11. Anatomy of the Spinal Cord • Corticospinal Tracts: motor from cerebral cortex: cross in the lower medulla • Spinothalamic Tracts: pain and temperature cross 1 or 2 levels above entry • Posterior Column: proprioception and vibration

  12. Cross-section

  13. Brown-Sequard • Usually after penetrating trauma • Ipsilateral motor paralysis • Ipsilateral loss of light touch and proprioception (anesthesia) below the level of the lesion • Ipsilateral hyperaesthesia • Contralateral loss of pain and temperature (analgesia) found one or two segments below the lesion

  14. UMN vs LMN • UMN increased DTR (after SS) LMN decreased DTR • UMN muscle tone increased LMN tone decreased, atrophy • UMN no fasciculations LMN fasciculations

  15. The Neuro Exam: History • Neuro complaints may be primary or secondary to other system disease • Infection • Overdose • Metabolic disorder • History often provides the key since the neuro exam may be normal • Subarachnoid hemorrhage • Carbon monoxide poisoning • Subdural hematoma • Nonconvulsive seizures

  16. The Neuro Exam: History • Time of Onset • Type of Onset • Progression • Trauma • Associated Symptoms • Factors that make it better/worse • Past Symptoms / Events • Past Medical History • Occupational / Environ Exposures

  17. The Neuro Exam: Initial Approach • Posture • Decorticate • Decerebrate • Facial or body assymetry • Hemiparesis results in external rotation of the foot to the affected sides

  18. The Neuro Exam: Physical • Vital Signs • Head: Evidence of Trauma • Neck: Bruits, Rigidity • Heart: Murmurs • Abdomen: Masses / Distention • Skin / Scalp: Lesions / Tenderness

  19. The Neuro Exam: Physical • Mental Status • Cranial Nerves • Motor • Sensory • Coordination • Reflexes

  20. Mental Status Exam • AVPU • GCS • Orientation • Speech (dysarthria vs aphasia) • Comprehension • Confusion assessment method (CAM) • Acute onset / fluctuating course • Inattention • Disorganized thinking • Altered level of consciousness • Mini-mental status exam • Score affected by education and age • < 20 = cognitive impairment

  21. Cranial Nerve Exam • Focus exam on II - VIII • Symmetrical vs assymetrical

  22. Cranial Nerve II • Visual acuity • Visual fields • Fundoscopy • Swinging flashlight test

  23. Cranial Nerve V • Sensory: corneal reflexes • Motor: jaw strength and muscle bulk • Corneal reflex may be abnormal in cerebellopontine angle lesions: test in patients with hearing deficits or vertigo

  24. Cranial Nerve VII • Motor • Smile • Bury eyelashes • Nasolabial fold • Forehead has bihemispheric innervation centrally • Taste anterior 2/3

  25. Cranial Nerve VIII – XII • VIII – vestibular function / hearing • IX – taste / sensation posterior pharynx • X – SCM; chin to the opposite side • XII - tongue

  26. Motor Exam • Strength • Primary concern: can patient breathe • Key test: drift of extremity • Tone • Hypertonia: subacute or chronic corticospinal lesion • Hypotonia: LMN lesion or acute UMN • Rigidity: basal ganglia disease • Bulk • Wasting correlates with LMN • Fasciculation • Anterior horn cell lesion • Tenderness • Metabolic/inflammatory muscle disease

  27. Motor Exam • 0 = no movement • 1 = flicker but no movement • 2 = movement but cannot resist gravity • 3 = movement against gravity but cannot resist examiner • 4 = resists examiner but weak • 5 = normal

  28. Sensory Exam • Pain/Temp – cross at entrance, ascend in spinal thalamic tract • Light touch – ascend in posterior column, cross in the brain stem • Vibration – posterior column, cross in the brain stem

  29. Sensory Exam • Dermatomal deficit accompanied with pain suggests peripheral lesion • Central deficits are not dermatomal and usually result in loss of sensation and pain • Thalamic pain syndrome

  30. Sensory Exam • Distribution • Right vs left vs bilateral • Dermatomal • Distal versus proximal • Stocking glove • Cape like • Pinprick versus light touch

  31. Sensory Exam • Double simultaneous testing • Establish sharp / dull • Check cheek, dorsum of hands, dorsum of feet • Test both sides simultaneously with pain • Lateralized pain, significant sensory deficit • Initially no lateralization but on repeat 15 sec later, lateralization suggest subtle deficit.

  32. Coordination • Requires integration of cerebellar, motor, and sensory functions • Balance requires (2 of 3) • Vision • Vestibular sense • Proprioception • Falling with eyes open or closed = cerebellar • Falling only with eyes closed = posterior column or vestibular

  33. Reflexes • Symmetry / upper vs lower • 0 = absent • 1 = hyporeflexia • 2 = normal • 3 = hyperreflexia • 4 = clonus (usually indicates organic disease) • Superficial reflexes (corneal, pharyngeal, abdominal, anal, cremasteric, bulbocavernosus) • Pathologic reflexes: babinski

  34. Pitfalls in the Neurologic Exam • Not getting a complete history utilizing family or observers • Not performing a systematic exam • Jumping to conclusions before gathering all the data • Misinterpreting old lesions for new • Misinterpreting limitations from pain as neurologic deficits

  35. Pearls • Lesions of the cerebral cortex result in sensory and motor defects confined to the contralateral side of the body • Brain stem and spinal cord lesions result in ipsilateral as well as contralateral defects due to varying patterns of crossover • Unilateral pain syndromes without motor deficits suggest possible thalamic pathology • A careful exam of CN II, III, IV and V is indicated in patients with headache or suspected processes that cause increased ICP • Testing for pronator drift is the best screen for muscle weakness of central origin

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