peripheral nervous system - Stritch School of Medicine
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Transcript peripheral nervous system - Stritch School of Medicine
Case 1
A 71 year old male presents for progressive difficulty walking
Developed back pain several weeks ago
Reports numbness in his legs
Has been having increasing difficulty walking
Physical Examination
Vitals stable
Normal cranial nerve findings
Increased tone of the LE bilaterally with moderate LE weakness;
UE’s normal
LE reflexes are brisk with upgoing toes; UE reflexes normal
Reduced sensation to all modalities to mid-abdomen
Gait slow with a spastic quality & requiring assistance
Case 1
Can you localize the lesion?
Localization
Peripheral nervous
system
Central nervous system
Brain
Spinal cord
Nerve root
Plexus
Peripheral nerve
Neuromuscular junction
Muscle
The most important step in neurologic
localization is differentiating a central
nervous system lesion from a peripheral
nervous system lesion
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Localization
Upper motor neuron
Mildly reduced bulk
Increased tone
Mild/moderate weakness
Hyper-reflexia & pathologic
responses
Grading muscle power
5: Full strength
4: Movement against some resistance
3: Movement against gravity only
2: Movement with gravity eliminated
1: Flicker or trace contraction
0: No contraction
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Lower motor neuron
Severely reduced bulk with
fasciculations
Reduced tone
Severe weakness
Hypotonia
Grading reflexes
4: Hyper with pathologic
responses
3: Hyperactive
2: Normal
1: Diminished
0: Absent
Localization
Spinal levels
C5/6
Its easy to
remember…1/2, 3/4,
5/6, 7/8
C7/8
ALWAYS ABNORMAL:
L3/4
Asymmetric reflexes
Pathologic responses
(Babinski, clonus = CNS)
Absent reflexes (PNS)
S1/2
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Case 1
1. What studies do you want to order and why?
Where does
the spinal cord
end?
Spinal Cord Compression
Management
Dexamethasone (100 mg
IV followed by 16 mg PO
daily in divided doses)
Differential
Metastatic disease
Epidural hematoma
Epidural abscess
Surgical evaluation
Radiotherapy
Vertebral collapse (2’ malignancy)
Aortic dissection
Case 2
28 year old male presents for progressive difficulty walking
“Stomach flu” 2 weeks ago
Recently developed low back pain and paresthesias in his feet
Has been having difficulty standing, climbing stairs, and has been
tripping frequently
Physical Examination
Vitals stable
Cranial nerves normal
Tone is relatively reduced; There is mild weakness of bilateral ankle
dorsiflexion with normal muscle bulk
Distal sensation is reduced to all modalities but normal in the trunk
Reflexes are reduced throughout
There is a mild bilateral foot drop
Case 2
Can you localize the lesion?
Localization
Peripheral nervous
system
Central nervous system
Brain
Spinal cord
Nerve root
Plexus
Peripheral nerve
Neuromuscular junction
Muscle
The most important step in neurologic
localization is differentiating a central
nervous system lesion from a peripheral
nervous system lesion
13
Localization
REFLEX ARC
Case 2
1. What studies do you want to order and why?
What else do you need to get the above done?
Test Results
CSF Analysis
EMG/NCV
WBC 2
RBC 0
Protein 103 (15-45)
Glucose 50
Coags and platelets WNL
Conduction block
Guillain-Barre Syndrome
Clinical Features
Typically follows an
infectious process (2/3rds
of pts)
C. jejuni, CMV, EBV, M.
pneumoniae
Presents with numbness
& tingling in the feet that
ascends
Pain the back & limbs is
common
Weakness follows
sensory disturbances
Areflexia
Bowel & bladder are
usually spared
Autonomic dysfunction
Symptoms should not
proceed >8 weeks
98% of pts achieve
“plateau phase” by 4 weeks
Duration of “plateau” 12
days
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Guillain-Barré syndrome
Ancillary studies
Albuminocytological dissociation with elevated CSF
protein with no or a few mononuclear cells
May be normal in the first week
If WBC count >10 think about Lyme, HIV, sarcoidosis
Antiganglioside antibodies
GM1 Abs (correlate with C. jejuni infection)
GQ1b associated with C. Miller Fisher variant (ataxia, areflexia &
ophthalmoparesis)
Electrophysiologic data (EMG/NCV)
Temporal dispersion, prolonged F-wave latencies, conduction
block & demyelinating range slowing
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Guillain-Barré syndrome: Subtypes
Miller-Fisher variant
AIDP
Most common type
AMAN
10%-20% of caseprogressive
weakness often with respiratory s
Rapidly failure
DTRs can be preserved or
exaggerated!
Ataxia, areflexia,
ophthalmoplegia
GQ1b Abs in almost all
patients
Pure sensory
Pure dysautonomic
CV involvement is the most
common
75% positive for C. jejuni (vs. 42%
in AIDP)
GM1, GD1a, GD1b Abs
Pharyngeal-brachial-cervical
GT1a Abs
May mimic MG
AMSAN
Possibly the most severe form
with slow and/or incomplete
recovery
Paraparetic
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Treatment
IVIG (0.4g/kg/day for 5 days) is at least effective
as plasma exchange without some side effects
Should be started within 2 weeks
Inconclusive data that IVIg has a higher relapse rate
Corticosteroids have not been shown to be
beneficial
Intubation criteria:
VC <15-20 mL/kg (oe <30% baseline)
PO2<70 mmHg
Oropharyngeal weakness
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GBS vs ATM
Case 1
A 27 year old female presents to the ER by her husband for
“sudden onset of confusion”
The patient is not following commands and is not talking
Physical Examination
She was unable to answer any questions, follow commands,
repeat, or produce spontaneous language
She had right lower facial weakness
She had right arm weakness
She had decreased sensation over her right arm and face
Case 3
Can you localize the
lesion?
Central nervous system,
left hemisphere
The patient has right
sided weakness and
aphasia, which is highly
suggestive of a left
hemispheric stroke.
Questions
What helps differentiate cortical from subcortical?
Cortical lesions can be associated with multimodal motor and
sensory deficits, such as aphasia and apraxia
White matter lesions (subcortical lesions) usually cause
weakness, spasticity, pure motor syndromes…but not aphasia,
apraxia, etc.
Stroke: Subcortical strokes
Caused by occlusion of small
(0.5-15.0 mm) penetrating
branches of cerebral arteries
Chronic HTN>DM>emboli
Syndrome Presentation Localization
Pure Motor
Face, arm, leg
Internal capsule
Pure Sensory
Face, arm, leg
Thalamus
Sensorimotor
Face, arm, leg
Thalamocapsular
Ataxichemiparesis
Hemi-ataxia &
hemiparesis
Basis pontis
Clumsy hand
dysarthria
Dysathria,
incoordination
Genu of the IC
25
Acute stroke syndrome
A-B-C’s
NPO, intubate for inadequate
airway, ventilate if needed
Correct hypotension, rule out
acute MI or arrhythmia (a-fib)
IV tPA must be/may be given within
4.5 hrs of stroke onset
Neuro deficit (NIHSS score 5 to 22)
must not be rapidly improving (TIA)
or post-ictal
Rule out hypoglycemia
Blood glucose is between 50 and
400 mg/dl
Normal PTT, PT<15 sec, platelets
>100,000
Minimize hyperglycemia by running
an IV of 0.9% normal saline initially
at a TKO rate
No bleeding, recent surgery, MI,
arterial puncture or LP
No blood, or edema/infarct > 1/3 of
MCA territory on CT
Use parenteral antihypertensive Tx
only for sustained, very high BP
(>220/120; or >185/110 for IV tPA)
BP maintained under 185/110
TIME IS BRAIN!!!
Clinical History
What imaging test do you want to order?
CT scan
in deteriorating patient, quickly rules out hemorrhage, mass
(tumor, abscess) or early infarct edema
shows cortical infarcts by 1-2 days, may miss lacunar infarcts
MRI scan
highest resolution scan, but longer scanning time
DWI (diffusion weighted imaging) detects impaired movement of
water in infarct immediately
non-invasively view arterial supply (MRA)
contraindications: pacemaker
Non Infused Head CT
Non Infused Head CT
What is your impression of the head CT?
The CT shows loss of gray-white junction and effacement of the sulci
throughout the left hemisphere, suggestive of a stroke
Evaluation
Based on the patient’s history, physical exam findings, and
CT scan, she was taken to Interventional Radiology for a
cerebral angiogram…
Cerebral Angiogram
Angiogram
MCA
occlusion
Clinical History
The patient received intra-arterial t-PA. Following the
procedure, she was transferred to the Neuro-ICU for
observation and management. A follow-up MRI was
obtained later…
MRI (Diffusion Weighted Image)
Questions
What do you think this patient’s long-term outcome was?
The patient presented within 3 hours of the onset of
symptoms. She received intra-arterial t-PA which was
effective in breaking the clot and re-establishing flow to the
left hemisphere. She was speaking English by the end of the
day…and French (her second language) the next day.
Because her symptoms were recognized quickly and action
was taken, her injury was limited.
Cerebral Angiogram Post t-PA
Pre tPA
Post tPA
Question
By the time everything was done, it was 4:15 in the
afternoon on a Friday. You have time to order one test
that might change your management that night….what
would you order (ie, what would you be looking for that
would have caused her stroke?)
Question
Answer….
Lower extremity venous doppler to look for the presence of a
deep vein thrombosis (some people would argue for an
echo…)
The patient was found to have a DVT and received an IVC
filter.
How did a blood clot in her leg get into her left middle
cerebral artery?
She had a patent foramen ovale (upwards of 30% of the
population do)
Case 4
A 34 year old female presents to the ER with complaint of eyelid
drooping
Started about one weak ago following an ER; she was given
steroids for an asthma exacerbation and ciprofloxacin for an
asymptomatic UTI
Has felt “weak all over” and has been getting progressively short of
breath
Physical Examination
Speech is soft with a nasal quality
There is fluctuating bilateral ptosis, pupils are equal and reactive,
she has a “snarl” smile
Normal bulk/tone; strength can be overcome after <60s of effort
Normal reflexes, normal sensory examination
Gait normal, but cannot stand up 10 times consecutively
Case 4
Can you localize the lesion
Peripheral NS
The PNS generally includes
The nerve cell bodies
The peripheral nerves
Roots
Plexus
Nerve
The neuromuscular
junctions (NMJs)
The muscles
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Localization
NMJ
Fluctuating weakness
(pre- and post-synaptic)
Normal bulk and tone
Normal sensory exam
Normal reflexes (usually)
Case 2
How do you want to evaluate the patient?
Studies to Order/Perform
Diagnostic
Ice Pack Test
Improves ptosis 2° MG in 80%
Local cooling slows kinetics of AChRs
Sleep Test
Tensilon Test
Respiratory Studies!!!
BMP w/ Mg/Phos, PT/PTT, ionized calcium
May need Quinton catheter placed by IR
Case 2
Studies
EMG/NCS with
repetitive stimulation or
single fiber EMG
Chest CT
Those who undergo
thymectomy are more
likely to have clinical
improvement, become
asymptomatic or attain
remission
May be less effective in
those >60
Labs
AChRAb
85% of pts w/ gMG and
50-60% w/ oMG test
positive
MuSK antibody
Striational muscle Ab
Screen for TSH, RA,
Pernicious anemia, SLE,
Sarcoid, Sjogren’s,
polymyositis
Case 2
Admit to ICU
Any pt w/ MG w/ questionable respiratory status should be
admitted to the ICU for close monitoring
14% of pts in myasthenic crisis have some degree of arrhythmias
Respiratory
30% of pts develop respiratory muscle weakness and crisis occurs
in 15-20%
Intubation Criteria/Management:
VC < 15 mL/kg
Stop anti-cholinesterase medication (causes excessive bronchial
secretions and diarrhea)
If needed, give pyridostigmine IV at 1/30th the oral dose
Case 2
Acute Treatment
TPE
Produces impvt in 75% of pts
Long term medication
Pyridostigmine 15-60 mg Q3-6
Long acting 180mg
Pts w/ primarily ocular symptoms respond poorly
Corticosteroids
10-20 mg/daily initially
Increase by 5-10 per week until satisfactory clinical response or dose
of 50-60/day
Azathioprine
2-3 mg/kg initially (most start w/ 50 mg/d for 1 week)
Case 5
A 32 year-old woman is found on the floor at work,
unconscious, but spontaneously breathing.
Physical Examination
BP is 146/75, pulse 80, afebrile.
There is complete left lid ptosis. Her left pupil is 5 mm and
sluggishly reacts to light; the right pupil is 2 mm and briskly
reacts to light.
She does not grimace or move to painful stimuli, nor attempt
to speak.
Case 5
Can you localize the lesion?
Evaluating the Altered Patient
1. What does the
patient look like?
Old?
How many lines?
Noisy neighbor?
Jerry Springer is blasting
away and they are
tangled in their call light?
Like you need to call the
unit?
Evaluating the Patient
2. Talk to the patient
Can they stay awake and pay attention to you?
Can the patient talk to you?
How do they sound (abnormal rate, dysarthric…)
Are they making any sense?
Can they tell you where they are?
Patients are first disoriented to time of day, then other aspects of
time, and then to place
Disorientation to self is rare…like raise the red flag rare
Evaluating the Patient
3. Ask them to read and write
Decreased reading comprehension is characteristic of
delirium
Writing disturbance is the most sensitive language
abnormality in delirium
The most salient characteristics are abnormalities in the
mechanics of writing…the formation of letters and words is
indistinct, and words and sentences sprawl in different
directions
Evaluating the Patient
4. How does his/her breathing look?
Does it look like he/she is breathing comfortably and
can protect the airway?
What does the breathing pattern look like?
Rule of thumb: if breath sounds can be heard at both
lung bases and if the RR is >8/min, ventilation is
probably adequate
Quick FVC: How high can they count with one breath (counting
to 20 is roughly equal to 2 L)
ABG is the only certain method of determining adequate
ventilation
Evaluating the Patient
5. What do the eyes look like?
The eyes are your biggest friend in an emergency
When examining pupils, make sure the lights are off and the
room is as dark as possible
Use a bright light
If there are abnormalities, ask to look at a drivers license or
other photo or ask family members (is it old or new?)
Evaluating the Patient: The Eyes
1. Observe for blinking at rest, to light, to threat, or loud
sound
2. Observe the position of the eyelids
Lift and release the lids, noting the tone
In unconscious pts the eyelids close gradually after they are released, a
mvt that can not be duplicated voluntarily by a hysterical patient
3. Observe the position of the eyes
A light held 50 cm from the face should reflect from the same point on
each pupil if the eyes lie on conjugate axes
4. Test for corneal reflex (if the patient is not easily
arousable)
Should cause bilateral response of eyelid closure and upward
deviation of the eye (Bell’s phenomenon)
Evaluating the Patient
6. Observe the size of the pupils and reactivity to
light
The presence or absence of the light reflex is the single
most important physical sign potentially distinguishing
structural from metabolic coma
Pupillary pathways are relatively resistant to metabolic
insult; midbrain lesion destroy it
Both anatomic innervations (sym and parasymp)
are tonically active, and the resting pupil
represents a balance
Unopposed parasymp pupil: 1.5-2 mm
Unopposed symp pupil: 8-9 mm
Coma: pupil size and reactivity
Smaller, reactive pupils
persist in metabolic coma
Larger, unreactive
pupil(s) reflect third
cranial nerve or midbrain
lesion
Pinpoint, reactive pupils
from pontine lesion (or
narcotic overdose)
Medicinal eyedrops may
impair light reflex
Evaluating the Patient
7. Examine for the Oculocephalic reflex (“Doll’s Head Eye
Phenomenon”)
Hold the eyelids open and briskly rotate the head from one
side to the other, at least briefly holding the endpoints
Positive response: contraversive conjugate eye deviation (head
to the right, eyes to the left)
Briskly flexed and then extended
Positive response: deviation of the eyes opposite; the eyelids
may open reflexly (dolls head phenomenon)
Evaluating the Patient
8. Cold calorics (oculovestibular reflex)
Can be very helpful in evaluating for brain death
Not useful in an acute setting as it is time consuming and
somewhat cumbersome
Evaluating the Patient
9. Examine the motor
function
What is the tone (normal,
flaccid rigid)
What is the strength (if the
patient can cooperate) or
response to pain
Apply nailbed pressure or
other noxious stimuli
Normal response:
pushing the stimulus
away, quick and nonstereotyped withdrawal
of the limb, or mvt of the
body and limb away from
the stimulus
Evaluating the Patient
10. Check the Reflexes
Have a reflex hammer (even skilled examiners cannot elicit
reflexes with a stethescope)
Reflexes should be symmetric
Upgoing toes/pathologic reflexes always indicate some CNS
dysfunction
Case 5
What test do you want to order for this patient?
Subarachnoid hemorrhage
Berry aneurysm
commonest if no trauma
Verify blood by CT, or LP
if CT normal
Emergent angio and
surgical or interventional
management
Intubate if GCS <8 or hypoxemia
IV Fluids (2L 0.9% NS)
MAP ≤120 mm Hg and systolic <180
mg Hg
Nimodipine 60 mg 6xs/daily
Phenytoin (if seizures occur)
EVD for acute hydrocephalus