Mental status
Cranial Nerves
Motor
proximal weakness implies muscle or spinal cord, distal is everything else / spasticity implies corticospinal / cogwheel implies Parkinson’s or PD-like / paratonic (Gegenhalten, pushing against) implies metabolic, degenerative or drug effect
Gait/Station
Romberg positive (vestibular or position sense, not cerebellar) when unsteady only with eyes closed and feet together (must be steady with eyes open, of course)
ataxia cerebellum
apraxia delayed initial step (wide-based → NPH and frontal lobe; loss of arm swing and shuffling gait → PD)
Reflexes
briskness more important than amplitude / Hoffman’s (common to have bilateral, symmetrical) / Babinski (always abnormal in adult) / increased with cerebral, brainstem and spinal cord disease (except in anterior horn such as ALS, which is rare), decreased with nerve or never root, variable with muscle and cerebellum
Sensory
vibration lost first with neuropathy, myelopathy and brain stem / position sense lost first only with cerebral pathology (double simultaneous stimulation testing for extinction phenomenon most effective but not pathognomonic for cerebral disease)
Neck
rigidity, bruits
Anatomic Diagnosis
Cerebral (encephalopathy, right or left cerebral dysfunction)
aphasia/apraxia, dementia, seizures, homonymous hemianopia / sterognosis, graphesthesia, tactile localization, 2-point discrimination most often cerebral or high cervical cord
Brainstem/cerebellum
Spinal cord (myelopathy)
Spinal root (radiculopathy)
pain, localized weakness, decreased reflexes, sometimes numbness
Nerve (neuropathy)
can be small (pain, temp) or large (position, vibration) fibers / reflexes decreased
NMJ (MG, Eaton-Lambert)
Muscle (myopathy)
usually proximal and head flexion
Meningeal
Note: spinal cord lesions are infrequently vascular, neuropathies unlikely due to tumor unless paraneoplastic / non-localizing findings often misinterpreted include: hemiparesis, dysarthria, dysphagia, hemisensory loss
Neuroradiology Tools
MRI
CT
Ultrasound
Transcranial doppler
Cerebral Angiography
EEG
MRI tidbits
T1 spinal fluid is dark
tumor dark
edema white w/ contrast
T2 spinal fluid is white [there is no contrast with T2]
Diffusion weighted distinguishes new from old stroke
Note: must order additional study of posterior fossa to look at cerebellum and hindbrain structures on MRI (normal MRI will not do this) / only commonly variable ventricle is occipital horn
Caution: risk of NSF in renal failure patients (see other)
CT scan
non-contrast brain scan is good for CVA unless 1) < 5mm lesion, < 12 hrs old, brainstem
contrast CT actually worse for evaluation of ICH because vasculature can appear like bleeding
Ultrasound
Good for evaluation of carotid arteries
Transcranial doppler
Cerebral Angiography
Gold standard
EEG
Status epilepticus vs. metabolic encephalopathy
3 spike and wave absence seizures
Cranial Nerves
CN palsies by themselves do not indicated brainstem disease / limb ataxia is not only cerebellar disease, but also brainstem (cerebellar peduncles), severe position sense loss and cerebral disease (infrequently)
impaired dysdiadochokinesia (rapid alternating movements) implicates motor, pyramidal, extrapyramidal, cerebellar and is most often early finding of hemiparesis
Oculomotor CN III [pic]
Sympathetic pathway
Hypothalamus C8-T2 superior cervical ganglion sweating (one path) and Muller’s muscles (eyelids) and dilator pupillae / because pathway splits (can have Horner’s without anydrosis)
Parasympathetic pathway
Retina optic n. chiasm tract pretectum Edinger-Wesphal CN III ciliary ganglion sphincter pupillae
Pupil in coma
Metabolic/diencephalic 2-3 mm reactive
Pretectum 5-6 mm, round, NR
Midbrain 4-5 mm, irregular, NR
Pons pinpoint, reactive
Uncal herniation ipsilateral, fixed dilated from CN III compression
Narcotic overdose pinpoint, reactive
Barbiturate overdose 4 mm, NR
Note: if entire CN III destroyed, pupil will be dilated (loss of parasympathetics), if eye is down and out, eyelid closed, and pupil not constricted, consider partial CN III damage (e.g. diabetic neuropathy)
Neuroanatomy of gaze
Horizontal gaze Left eye is left PPRF to left 6th and contralateral right MLF and right 3rd / MLF lesion is an INO (internuclear opthalmoplegia) / left PPRF produces left lateral gaze, lesion causes deviation to right
Upward gaze pretectum and posterior commisure
Downward gaze riMLF
Pupil afferent pupillary defect (APD) implies optic nerve problem (symmetric APD may be
normal variation)
Visual Defects
Optic nerve – central scotoma, decreased visual acuity, unilateral altitudinal hemianopia
Optic chiasm – in pituitary tumor, central scotoma (one or both) precedes bitemporal hemianopia / it may be as subtle as a color problem, also use pinhole to correct acuity
Optic tract – contralateral homonymous hemianopia (often affecting macula) / incongruent VF defect (uncommon) also implies optic tract lesion
Optic radiations - homonymous hemianopia or quadrantanopsia, contralateral
Occipital - homonymous hemianopia or quadrantanopsia, contralateral / homonymous scotomata / bilateral altitudinal hemianopia / temporal crescent (monocular, contralateral and just about the only unilateral VF defect seen with occipital lesions (otherwise it’s the optic n.)
Nystagmus (see vertigo)
mostly of central origin (brainstem) vs. toxic effect
Others: direction fixed seen with CN VIII (contralateral nystagmus with rotary element identical in all directions of gaze), BPPV and congenital nystagmus
Diencephalic syndrome
Most common – hyperalert, euphoria, FTT (anorexia in children, obesity in adults)
Less common – vomit, nystagmus, optic atrophy, polyuria (less common)
Spasmus Nutans
early childhood (1st year) / nystagmus, head nodding / complete recovery
Nervous System Neoplasia
childhood tumors of CNS
medulloblastoma - homer-Wright rosettes
ependymoma - perivascular pseudorosettes
choroid plexus papilloma and carcinoma
craniopharyngiomas (children)
Adults (supratentorial)
metastases > glioblastoma multiforme > meningioma > pituitary
Presentation: 30% with headaches (dull/steady, worse in morning, exacerbated by coughing), nausea, vomiting, focal neurological defects, seizures / symptoms are progressive over time
Diagnosis: focal CNS findings, seizures, lethargy / CT and MRI with contrast
Treatment: radiation therapy [NEJM] or tumor excision / almost all anaplastic astrocytomas and gliomas recur
Brain metastases
25% of cancer patients die with intracranial mets
Presentation: similar to primary CNS tumor / 3-8% involve leptomeninges / multifocal signs (cranial nerve palsies, extremity weakness, paresthesias, loss of DTRs
Diagnosis: CT or MRI / CSF samplings (at least 3) to diagnose leptomeningeal involvement
Treatment: resection or radiotherapy / others depending on specific cancers
bronchogenic carcinoma > breast cancer > melanoma > renal cell carcinoma > colon
Specific CNS Tumors
Astrocytomas
-protoplasmic vs. gemistocytic (may be aggressive)
Astrocytoma - NO vascular proliferation / NO necrosis
Anaplastic astrocytoma - vascular proliferation but NO necrosis
Glioblastoma multiforme - necrosis with or without pseudopallisading
Pilocytic astrocytoma
compact areas (rosenthal fibers) / loose areas (eosinophilic granular bodies and stellate astrocytes)
Pleomorphic xanthroastrocytoma
Subependymal giant cell astrocytoma
Desmoplastic astrocytoma of infancy
Meningioma
meningothelial whorl / syncytial, fibrous, transitional (may have psammoma bodies)
Schwannoma (Neurilemmoma)
antoni A (nuclear palisading) / antoni B
MRI better than CT (shows tissue better and evaluates spinal canal involvement)
Neurofibroma
may accompany von Recklinghausen’s
oligodendroglioma - artifactual “fried egg” appearance
anaplastic oligodendroglioma
myxopapillary ependymoma - occurs in cauda equina
subependymoma
colloid cyst of 3rd ventricle
gangliocytoma
ganglioglioma - plus neoplastic glial cells
central neurocytoma - in foramen of Monroe
germinoma - most frequent pineal tumor
pineocytoma
pineoblastoma
Dementia
Incidence: 1% by 60 yrs / 5% by 65 yrs / 20% by 80 yrs / 50% by 85 yrs
Ddx: 1st Alzheimer’s (70%), 2nd Alcoholism, 3rd Vascular (10%)
Neurological: Alzheimer’s, Pick’s, Lewy Body, Parkinson’s, ALS, Huntington’s, CJD, NPH, MS
Drugs: analgesics, diuretics, anticholinergics, antihypertensives, psychotropic, sedative-hypnotics
Others: infectious (HIV, neurosyphilis, lyme), toxic/metabolic (hypothyroid, Wilson’s, B12 deficiency, etc), intracranial tumors, paraneoplastic syndromes
Work-Up
History
Use of medication (analgesic, anticholinergic, psychotropic, sedative-hypnotic)
Distinguish from depression (depression usually has poor effort in answering questions whereas dementia has good effort but incorrect answers)
Reversible causes generally do not present with constellation of findings (aphasia, apraxia, aculculia, agnosia)
Hypothyroid causes depression, irritability, mental slowing
Psychiatric, myelopathic and/or neuropathic changes of B12 deficiency may occur in absence of anemia; low B12 levels also may have no clinical manifestations
HIV-dementia (20% of HIV patients) often shows psychomotor slowing and focal neurological signs, but dementia is rarely the sole presentation
Cerebral vasculitis presents with progressive cognitive decline or based on area of involvement
Testing
Mini-mental status exam
Labs:
CBC, urinalysis, TSH, B12, folate, RPR + non-contrast head CT [~10% yield]
HIV, Apo E testing (utility debated)
CSF – reserved for atypical cases
Imaging infarction, neoplasm, extracerebral fluid, hydrocephalus
CXR
MRI if motor dysfunction (rigidity, abnormal reflexes, asymmetry) [can diagnosis some ischemic changes missed by CT]
EEG – toxic/metabolic, subclinical seizures, Creutzfeldt-Jakob
Neuropsychological testing – impaired verbal memory and category naming is suggestive
Physical exam: frontal release signs (rooting reflex, Myerson’s sign, palmomental reflex, bilateral grasp reflex)
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