Neurological Disorders
Neurological Disorders
Neurological Disorders
Clinical features
- Complete unilateral facial
weakness at 24-72h
- Ipsilateral numbness or pain
around the ear
- taste
- Hypersensitivity to sounds
- Headache, facial swelling
On examination
- Patient is unable to wrinkle their
forehead
- Unilateral sagging of the mouth
- Drooling saliva
- Failure of eye closure may cause
a watery or dry eye
Clinical features
- Weakness
o Symmetrical, bilateral, ascending
weakness and paralysis
o Generally, does not progress after 4 Management
wks 1. Arrange intravenous
- Sensory Disturbances immunoglobulin/Plasma exchange
o Paraesthesia in distal extremities 2. Symptoms support – intubation (breathing
o Reduced or absent reflexes support
- Pain – back pain, limb pain or
neuropathic pain
- Autonomic dysfunction (E.G sweating
urinary retention)
- Respiratory Muscle paralysis
Headache
Common presenting symptom in the world. Most likely to affect women
The international headache society 2013 categorise headaches into
Primary
o Tension type headache
o Cluster headaches
o Migraines These two have sudden onset and may
peak at the point of maximal exertion
o Others (during an orgasm in post coital
Stabbing headaches. You should aim to exclude
subarachnoid haemorrhages in these
Exertional cases
Post coital
Valsalva
Persistent
Secondary
o usually has an attributable cause and is likely of greater severity such as trauma, vascular event, infection, raised
intracranial pressure, space occupying lesions
o Medication overuse headache – NICE recommends being alert to the possibility of medication overuse headache in
people whose headache developed or worsened while they were taking the following drugs
Triptans, opioids, ergots or combination analgesic
Paracetamol, aspirin
Trigeminal neuralgia
Cluster headaches:
Severe disabling condition characterised by a painful
Specific headache associated with intense pain coming from
episode of sudden sharp stabbing pain in the region of the
within around or behind the eye.
trigeminal nerve distribution (specially V2 and V3 branches)
patient usually presents with a debilitating headache with
May occur secondary to nerve compression by arteries or
red watery eye with or without nasal congestion
veins.
Onset: any age, ♂: ♀> 5:1 (mostly male); common in smokers Symptoms:
Symptoms: - Paroxysms of intense, stabbing pain, lasting seconds in
- Pain in unilateral -almost always affects the same side the trigeminal nerve distribution
- Several times a day without aura- might be nocturnal - Unilateral typically affecting mandibular or maxillary
- May last up to three hours and cause restlessness divisions
- Rapid onset of excruciating pain around one eye – eye Triggers
becomes watery and bloodshot with lid swelling - Washing affected area, shaving, eating, talking dental
- Lacrimation, facial flushing protheses
- Sometimes chronic not episodic Typical Patient: female over 50-years-old
Stepwise plan Secondary causes: Compression of the trigeminal root by
- Dx is made clinically anomalous or intracranial aneurysm, tumour, meningeal
- Encourage lifestyle changes – Alcohol and smoking inflammation, MS, Zoster, skull base malformation (Chiari)
cessation
Acute attacks – give 100% oxygen for 15mins, Triptan sc 6mg
MRI may help exclude secondary causes
(suma) nasal spray.
Rx:
Preventives – Corticosteroids short term. Verapamil 360mg,
Lithium 900mg 1st line: carbamazepine 100mg/12h PO max 400mg/6h
(effective in about half the cases of trigeminal neuralgia but
has many side effects such as -dizziness, drowsiness and a
small risk of agranulocytosis. A derivative oxcarbazepine,
whilst being more expensive has fewer side effects)
2nd line: Baclofen and gabapentin
If drugs failpercutaneous radiofrequence coagulation or
Gamma knife.
Microvascular decompression -use to electric current to
dampen pain
Migraine Tension type headache
Path: Episodic primary headache that may present with or Path: Episodic or chronic headache related to stress
without aura or difficulty. Classically described feeling a “tight-
Epidemiology: nearly 3x times more common in women band around the head”
Aetiology: Condition is thought to be neurovascular. More common in women. Bilateral not pulsatile
Inflammation of trigeminal sensory neurons causes Stepwise plan (NICE 2012 CG150)
increased vascular permeability and platelet activation. 1. Further investigations are usually
This is thought to increase the sensitivity of neuronal fibres unnecessary
which then interpret normal arterial flow through 2. Provide reassurance as this condition is
meningeal arteries as painful. This is thought to account for generally self-limiting
the “pulsatile” pain 3. Provide first line pharmacological
management
- Paracetamol
- NSAIDS – (ibuprofen 400mg first line)
Migraine without Aura 4. Prescribe medication for chronic recurrent
- General mnemonic “pound” is helpful tension type headaches
3 or more of the criteria - Tricyclic Antidepressant (amitriptyline)
Pulsatile in nature - Titrate down over time
One day duration - NICE recommends acupuncture in this
Unilateral case as a form of prophylaxis
Nausea
Disability -from work or from physical activity
Presentation
Usually monosymptomatic. Presents with unilateral optic neuritis (pain on eye movement and rapid
central vision). Corticospinal tract and bladder involvement are also common. Symptoms may worsen with
heat (exercise or a hot bath)
Visual optic neuritis (often the FIRST Presentation)
ophthalmoplegia (can cause diplopia)
Bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia
Relative afferent pupillary defect (Marcus Gunn pupil)
detected on a swinging light test
Types of MS
1. Relapsing-remitting disease
Relapsing-remitting MS is also characterized as active or not active within a specified time frame
(e.g., 6 months, 1 year). As a guide, assessments for disease activity should be conducted at least
annually.
2. Progressive disease
Progressive disease, whether primary progressive (progressive accumulation of disability from
onset) or secondary progressive (progressive accumulation of disability after an initial relapsing
course), has four possible sub classifications taking into account the level of disability:
Diagnosis
Careful history may revel past episodes e.g. brief unexplained visual loss and detailed examination may
show more than 1 lesion
Causes
Traumatic head injury
Rupture of a Saccular “Berry” aneurysm (Berry aneurysm are associated with Polycystic kidney disease and
connective tissue disorders such as Marfan and coarctation of the aorta)
Space occupying lesions, vasculitis, encephalitis, tumour
Arterio-venous malformations (the is abnormal malformation)
Risk Factors
o Previous Hx of SAH,
o Smoking and alcohol misuse
o Increased BP
o Family history of SAH
o Connective tissue disease – Marfans, Ehlers-Danlos
o PKD, Coarctation of the aorta
Investigation
1. Arrange CT
First choice – detects 95% of SAH within the 1st 24 hours
2. Consider a LP
If SAH is suspected and the CT is negative
Perform after 12 h allowing sufficient time for red cell lysis to occur
Management
Immediate referral to neurosurgery
Re-examine the CNS often; chart Blood pressure, pupils and GCS- Repeat CT
Maintain cerebral perfusion by keeping well hydrated but am for SBP <160mmhg
Nimodipine (60mg/4hPO for 3 weeks or 1mg/h IVI) reducing vasospasm and consequent morbidity from
cerebral ischemia
Surgery: Endovascular coiling
Complications
1. Rebleeding – common cause of death
2. Cerebral ischemia – due to vasospasm may cause permanent CNS deficit
3. Hydrocephalus – due to blockage of the arachnoid granulation requires a ventricular or lumbar drain
Subdural Haematoma
Patient present with history of trauma accompanied by lucid interval in which the patients GCS
deteriorates over hours to days
Other clinical features:
- The lucid interval last for hours or days declared by decreased GCS and a rising ICP
- Increasingly severe headache
- Vomiting, confusion, seizures
- Hemiparesis with brisk reflexes and upgoing plantar
- If bleeding continues the ipsilateral pupil dilates and the coma deepens, bilateral weakness
develops
Test -CT scan to show haematoma (often biconvex/lens shaped, the blood forms a more rounded shape
compared with the sickle shaped subdural haematoma a the tough dural attachment keep it more
localised
MEDICATIONS
▪Mannitol, other osmotic diuretics
▫↑urine excretion, ↓intracranial pressure
▪Anticoagulation reversal
▫Individuals undergoing surgery, on anticoagulation therapy
SURGERY
▪Craniotomy
▫Evacuation of blood mass
▪Embolization/ligation of damaged blood vessel
▪Trephination (burr-hole)
▫ In acute EDH, if neurosurgical procedure delayed
▪Laminectomy (laminectomy enlarges your spinal canal to relieve
pressure on the spinal cord or nerves)
▫↓ blood in spinal epidural hematoma
Common in the elderly – Consider Takayasu if the patient is less than 55 years
Associated with PMR
The risk irreversible Bilateral vision loss if not treated
Symptoms
Test
- ESR and CRP (should be very high)
- Increased platelets
- Increased ALP
- Decreased Hb
- Temporal artery biopsy with 14 days of starting steroids
Management
Prednisolone 60 mg PO immediately or
IV methylprednisolone – if evolving visual loss
Myasthenia Gravis
MG is an autoimmune disease mediated by antibodies to Nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AChr)on the
post synaptic side of the neuromuscular junction.
Presentation
Slowly increasing or relapsing muscular fatigue. Muscle groups affected are
o Extraocular
o Bulbar (swallowing, chewing)
o Face and neck
o Limb girdle and trunk
Signs –
o Ptosis, diplopia
o myasthenic snarl or smiling
o ‘peek sign’ of orbicularis fatigability
(eyelids separate after manual opposition
to sustained closure)
o On counting to 50 – Voice fades
(dysphonia is a rare presentation)
Symptoms are exacerbated by:
Pregnancy
Decreased serum Potassium
Infection, emotion, climate
Gentamicin, opiated, tetracycline, quinine,
Beta blockers
Treatment:
- Acutely severe: Intubation/mechanical ventilation + IV immunoglobulin (400mg/Kg). +/- Rituximab
(immunosuppressant). Or Prednisolone (to inhibit immune system 1-1.5mg/kg)
- Mild class I/II: Pyridostigmine 30-60mg (cholinesterase inhibitor- used to improve muscle strength). +/-
Thymectomy
- Moderate class III: Pyridostigmine +/- immunosuppressant + Thymectomy + IV immunoglobulin
Intracranial venous Thrombosis
Thrombosis of cerebral sinuses or veins causes cerebral infraction – though Less common than arterial
disease
Seizure are common and focal – complicate diagnosis and post-ictal drowsiness may impair GCS
assessment
Transverse sinus Papilledema, Headache + mastoid pain, Focal CNS signs , seizures
Inferior petrosal sinus Vth and VIth cranial nerve palsies with temporal and retro orbital pain
Gradinego syndrome suggesting otitis media is the cause
Cavernous sinus Often due to spread from facial pustules or folliculitis causing headache
chemosis(swelling of the conjunctiva), oedematous eyelids, painful
ophthalmoplegia (paralysis of muscles surrounding the eye) , proptosis
Wrist drop
A condition in which the wrist and fingers cannot extend at the meta-carpophalangeal joints
The wrist is partially flexed due to the flexor muscles of the forearm & the posterior compartments
remain paralysed
Causes: stab wounds to the chest/below the clavicle (damage to the brachial plexus) so the person develops
neurological deficits inc. inability to abduct should be beyond 15 degrees and extend the forearm. Broken
humerus- damage to radial nerve and maybe the deep brachial artery. Lead poisoning (affects the radial
artery). Persistent injury. Neuropathy.
Diagnosis: nerve conduction velocity (studies nerve conduction; speed). Inability to extend the thumb into
a hitch-hiker’s sign. X-ray to identify bone spurs
Is a gait abnormality in which the forefoot happens due to weakness, irritation or damage to the common
fibular nerve (including sciatic nerve) or paralysis of the muscle in the anterior part of the foot?
Drop foot is usually a symptom of a problem and not a disease by itself
It can be temporary or permanent depending on how weak the muscles are or the degree of
paralysis
The person can’t raise their toes or the foot from below the ankle (dorsiflexion). When they walk
they limp to prevent dragging the foot sometimes they drag
Cause: damage to a muscle or spinal cord, abnormal anatomy, toxins or disease. Toxins
(organophosphates- pesticides) Diseases (stroke, muscular dystrophy, MS, Gullian Barre syndrome), spinal
stenosis, disc herniation
Treatment: treat the underlying condition. Functional Electrical stimulation is a technique where
electrical are used to activate
Sarcoid
A disease in which there is a collection of inflammatory cells that form a lump known as granuloma
The disease usually begins in the lungs, skin, and lymph nodes. Less common in eyes, liver, heart, brain
Any organ can be affected.
Lungs: SOB, wheezing, coughing, chest pain
Diagnosis: biopsy, enlarged lymph nodes at the root of the lungs, hypercalcaemia with normal PTH, high
levels of angiotensin converting enzyme in serum. Exclude TB
Meningioma Primary tumour of the cranial & spinal compartments (meninges). More
common in women and benign. They may also produce a visible growth.
Diagnosis: MRI (with/without contrast. Surgically removed, some cases
they get local radiation
Vestibular Benign, slow growing that usually grows from the vestibular component
schwannoma of the vestibulocochlear nerve. Presents with unilateral sensorineural
hearing loss. Causes vertigo, and unilateral facial numbness (facial nerve
is pressed)
Medulloblastoma Malignant, invasive brain tumour that arises from cerebellar vermis.
They arise sporadically by the age of 20yrs (most common in kids). Signs-
diplopia, vomiting, hydrocephalus. CT/MRI Is used and surgery,
radiation, chemo are used.
Astrocytic brain Primary tumour arising from astrocytes which make up the blood-brain
tumours barrier. More common in white men. Diagnosis: cranial imaging, surgical
biopsy (because the tumour causes histological changes). Treatment:
radio, chemo, surgery.
Craniopharyngioma Benign non-glial epithelial tumour of the CNS arises from sellar/subsellar
space. More common in 5-14yrs &50-70yrs.
The kids present with growth failure, adults- diabetes, and sexual
dysfunction. Diagnosis: CT/MRI. Treatment: surgery, radio.
Primary CNS Rare & malignant cells develop in lymph nodes in brain and spinal cord.
lymphoma Risk factors: immunosuppression, HIV, EBV. Diagnosis: cranial CT, clinical
history, Lumbar puncture, CSF. Treatment: methotrexate-base chemo +
cytarabine + whole brain radio.
Acromegaly, Cushing Acromegaly - due to a pituitary somatotroph adenoma secreting
syndrome,
excessive GH, which stimulates insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1)
prolactinoma, pituitary
production, leading to the majority of the clinical manifestations of the
mass
acromegaly
Cushings syndrome - hypercortisolism caused by an ACTH-secreting
pituitary adenoma
Prolactinoma - Benign prolactin-expressing and secreting pituitary
adenoma
Raised intracranial pressure
The volume inside the cranium is fixed – so any increase in the contents can lead to raised ICP
Causes oedema ,obstruction to fluid outflow
NORMAL ICP in Adults - <15mmHg
1. Elevate head (to improve drainage ) and provide oxygen and ventilation
Target PO2 >13 kPa
Target pCO2 : 4.5kPa
2. Treat pyrexia (if present )
3. Prescribe Mannitol or hypertonic saline
Give 20% solution 0.25- 0.5g/kg IV over 10-20 min
Causes osmotic diuresis and initial reduction of CSF
May later cause a rebound increase in ICP
Give as bolus as opposed to continuous infusion