Clinical Skills in Neurology
Clinical Skills in Neurology
Clinical Skills in Neurology
How to diagnose
How to follow-up
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“In life, the tracts are not marked in red”
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Taking a History
Headache
Blackouts
Cerebrovascular disease
Multiple sclerosis
Parkinsonism
Giddiness
Symptoms with no disease
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Why History?
Tests (eg MRI, CT, PET, SPECT, EEG) add the rest.
i.e. if you don’t know the diagnosis after the history-start again!
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General Principles
- Pearls of Wisdom
The Method:
Where is the lesion?
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The Basics
1. Introduction
3. Presenting symptoms:
Time course
Negative or positive symptoms
Anatomical localisation
Previous neurological history
Family history
Coexisting medical disorders
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Time Course
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Negative/Positive symptoms
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Anatomical Localisation
Eg Visual field:
Are symptoms in arm and leg on one side, opposite sides or both sides?
Midbrain
To the
R face
Pons
A crossed motor deficit
(eg R face, L arm/leg)
Facial
localises to the pons Medulla
nuclei
Decussation
SC
To left limbs 12
The Visual Fields
“Homonymous” “Monocular”
field defect = defect =
lesion behind the lesion in front
optic chiasm of chiasm
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Dorsal-columns
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Spino-thalamic pathway
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Somatosensory Cortex
• Somatosensory neurones from
one side of the body project to
the opposite side of the cortex.
• Cortical sensation is complex
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Previous Neurological History
Nb Patients may not know the relationship (if any) between previous
symptoms or illness and current complaint
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Family History:
Dementia age 60
LH 44
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Co-existing Medical Disorders
Eg: Hypertension
Diabetes
Eg Statins
Rarely cause myositis
Eg Codeine
Commonly causes headache
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What About Chronic
Disease?
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New symptoms from existing
condition
Eg Continence in MS
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Drugs….and Effects
Eg Parkinsons treatment
10% of patients each year after diagnosis develop PD complications
Eg Statins
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How to do a CNS
examination
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Cognitive Function
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Cranial Nerves
1. Olfactory: Test airway (eg perfume, lavender), then test each side
2. Optic: A) Acuity
B) Fields
C) Pupil response
D) Fundoscopy
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Eye Movements
SR IO IO SR
LR MR LR
IR SO SO IR
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5. Trigeminal Facial sensation and Corneal reflex
Muscles of mastication
8. Vestibulo-Cochlear
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9. Glosso-pharyngeal: Almost purely sensory.
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The PNS (Motor)
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The PNS (Sensory)
1. Pinprick/Temp
2. Light touch
3. JPS
4. VBS
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The PNS (Cerebellum)
Balance
Speech
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Todays Task (s)
3. Present this.
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