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Demystifying the neurology examination
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Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Demystifying the neurology examination

Page 2: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Aims

• Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination

• Revise some neuroanatomy• Show some pathologies

• Not creating instant experts• Not the only neurology talk you’ll ever need to

attend• Not a substitute for practice

Page 3: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Format• Cranial nerves

– Names and function– Some anatomy

• Motor system• Reflexes• Sensory system• Some practicalities of examination

– Cranial nerves and more anatomy– Limbs

• Images– Normality and pathology

Page 4: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

• Cranial nerves

• Arms• Torso• Legs

• Higher mental function

• Observation • Tone • Power • Co-ordination • Reflexes• Sensation

– Light touch – Proprioception – Vibration sense– Pin prick – Temperature

I - XII

Page 5: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

• Cranial nerves

• Arms• Torso• Legs

• Higher mental function

• Observation Ex/Pyr• Tone C/Sp• Power C/Sp• Co-ordination Cblr• Reflexes• Sensation

– Light touch – Proprioception D/Col – Vibration sense– Pin prick

S/Thal– Temperature

Gait

Page 6: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.
Page 7: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves

1

2

3

4

6

Smell

Vision

Eye movements

Page 8: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves

5

7

8

9

10

12

11

Face – motor and sensory

Face – motor (+ taste)

Hearing and balance

Palatal movement and gag reflex

Tongue movement

Head/shoulder movements

Page 9: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 1

Olfactory

• Sense of smell– Rarely formally tested– Ask directly– Bedside foodstuffs

Page 10: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 2

Optic

• Visual acuity– Snellen chart, newspaper

• Visual fields

• Direct light reflex

• (Consensual light reflex)

Page 11: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Retina

Optic nerve

Optic chiasm

Lateral geniculate bodies

Pretectal nucleus

Edinger-Westfahl nucleus

Ciliary ganglion

Pupil

III

Page 12: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

L RVisual fields

Optic radiation

Retina

Optic nerve

Optic chiasm

Bitemporal hemianopia

RIGHT homonymous hemianopia

Page 13: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 3, 4 and 6

Occulomotor, Trochlear and Abducens

• Eye movements, pupil dilatation– SO4, LR6

• Double vision? Nystagmus? INO?

• Ptosis

Page 14: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 5

Trigeminal

• Motor– Masseter, temporalis

• Sensory– Va, Vb, Vc– Corneal reflex (unpleasant)

Page 15: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 7

Facial• Motor

– Frontalis (UMN v LMN)– Other facial muscles– Stapedius

• Sensory– Taste from anterior 2/3 of tongue via chordi

tympani

Page 16: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 8

Vestibulocochlear

• Hearing– Crude bedside testing

• Balance

• Rinne– Normal is positive

• Weber– Towards a conductive defect

Page 17: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 9 and 10

Glossopharyngeal and vagus

• Palatal movement with “aaaah”

• Gag reflex – bilateral

• IX: taste from posterior 1/3 of tongue

Page 18: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 12

Hypoglossal

• Tongue movement (NB: fasciculation)– Deviates towards the lesion

Page 19: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – 11

Accessory

• Shoulder and head movements– Sternocleidomastoid and trapezius muscles

Page 20: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves – ‘epilogue’

Fundoscopy!

• Optic disc - only part of the brain that you can see

• Retina, vessels

• Cataracts

Page 21: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

The Motor System

1. Corticospinal system = pyramidal- Cortex anterior horn cells- skilled, strong, organized movement

2. Extra-pyramidal = basal ganglia- facilitates fast fluid movements

3. Cerebellum- coordination

4. Lower motor neurones

Page 22: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

1. Corticospinal tracts

• Main nerve fibres meet in internal capsule• Cross in medulla• Lesions UMN signs

= contralateral hemiparesis, spasticityNB: upper limb drift(UL: flexors; LL extensors predominate)

• Causes:– Most common = CVA– SOL– MS

Page 23: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Leg

Arm

Head and neck

Internal capsule

Cerebral cortex

Page 24: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

2. Extra-pyramidal system

• Reduction in speed with muscle rigidity

• Involuntary movements

• Most common disorder = Parkinson’s

Page 25: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Corpus striatum

Caudate nucleus

Globus pallidus

Putamen

Cerebral cortex

Substantia nigraThalamus

Subthalamic nuclei

Cerebellum Reticular formation

Cranial nerve nuclei

Spinal cord

Page 26: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

3. Cerebellum

• Coordination (rather than speed)

• Lateral lobes coordinate ipsilateral limb

• Vermis – axial posture and balance

Signs: intention tremor, ataxia, nystagmus, dysarthria (bilateral)

Page 27: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

4. Lower motor neurones

• Motor pathway from anterior horn cell (or cranial nerve nucleus) via peripheral nerve to end plate

• Weakness, hypotonia, wasting, loss of reflexes• Causes:

– Bell’s, MND, polio– Spinal root compression– Peripheral nerve trauma, entrapment, mononeuritis

multiplex

Page 28: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

UMN v LMN

Cortex

UMN

LMN

Muscle

Spasticity Flaccidity

Page 29: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Reflexes – the spinal reflex arc

• Activation of stretch receptors = first order sensory neurones

• Synapse directly with motor efferent fibres at local spinal level

• Activate LMNs contraction

REINFORCEMENT

Page 30: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Myotomes

Page 31: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.
Page 32: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Reflexes – spinal levels

• Supinator C 5-6

• Biceps C 5-6

• Triceps C 7-8

• Knee L 3-4

• Ankle S 1-2

Plantar reflex

Page 33: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Reflexes – spinal levels

• Supinator C 5-6

• Biceps C 5-6

• Triceps C 7-8

• Knee L 3-4

• Ankle S 1-2

Plantar reflex

Page 34: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Reflexes – spinal levels

• Supinator C 5-6

• Biceps C 5-6

• Triceps C 7-8

• Knee L 3-4

• Ankle S 1-2

Plantar reflex

Page 35: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Reflexes – spinal levels

• Supinator C 5-6

• Biceps C 5-6

• Triceps C 7-8

• Knee L 3-4

• Ankle S 1-2

Plantar reflex

Page 36: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Reflexes – spinal levels

• Supinator C 5-6

• Biceps C 5-6

• Triceps C 7-8

• Knee L 3-4

• Ankle S 1-2

Plantar reflex

Page 37: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Plantar reflex – Babinski’s sign

• Normal = downgoing (flexor)

• Extensor in UMN lesions

• Most receptive – posterior 1/3 of the lateral aspect of the sole

• Dorsiflexion and fanning of other toes

Page 38: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Abdominal reflex

• Contraction of oblique muscles in response to sensory stimulus

• Ipsilateral loss in UMN lesions

Page 39: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Sensory pathways

• Posterior columns

• Spinothalamic tracts

Page 40: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Posterior columns

• Travel ipsilaterally to brainstem, then cross to form medial lemniscus and pass to the thalamus

• Carry:– light touch (and 2-point discrimination)– vibration sense– proprioception (joint position sense)

Page 41: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Spinothalamic tracts

• Axons synapse in the dorsal horn and cross within two levels

• Then pass to the thalamus and reticular formation

• Carry:– pain– temperature

Page 42: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Sensory symptoms

• Paraesthesia

• Numbness

• Pain

• Quality and distribution suggest site of lesion

Page 43: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Spinal root and cord lesions

• Root pain– Worse with stretch

• Posterior column lesions– Lhermitte’s phenomenon

• Spinothalamic lesions– Dissociated sensory loss

• Cord compression– External (tumour, abcess) or internal (syrinx)

Page 44: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

The Practicalities

Page 45: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Clinical examination

• Introduction– Shake hands (myotonia)

• General observation– Tremor, chorea– Obvious wasting– Asymmetry

• ‘Clues’– Diabetic accessories– ‘White stick’

Page 46: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Cranial nerves

• Face the patient• Observe for:

– ptosis (NB: myasthenia), asymmetry, scars

• Go through in logical order– (1) 2 ‘3 4 6’ 5(+r) 7 8 ‘9 10 12’ 11

• Equipment required:– Snellen chart, pen-torch, red hatpin, cotton

wool, needle, orange stick, tuning fork, opthalmoscope

Page 47: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Clinical abnormalities

• Horner’s syndrome– Unilateral pupillary constriction, partial ptosis,

enopthalmos

• Causes:– Brain stem – pontine glioma, LMS– Cervical cord – syringomyelia, tumour– T1 root lesions – bronchial apical tumour, cervical rib– Sympathetic chain in the neck – neoplastic infiltration,

post-surgery, carotid artery occlusion– Others - congenital

Page 48: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Occular and pupillary abnormalities

• Argyll Robertson pupil– neurosyphilis

• Holmes-Adie pupil (myotonic pupil)• Internuclear opthalmoplegia

– MS (lesion in MLF)

• Diplopia• Strabismus (squint)

– Paralytic, non-paralytic

Page 49: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Pons

Medulla

Spinal cord

6th nucleus

7th nucleus

VG

Pontine nucleus of 5

Spinal nucleus of 5

Va

Vb

Vc

SUPERIOR ORBITAL FISSURE

FORAMEN ROTUNDUM

FORAMEN

OVALE

Page 50: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Facial nerve palsies

• Part of facial nucleus supplying frontalis receives supranuclear fibres from each hemisphere

• UMN– Upper part of face spared

• LMN– Whole face affected

• Ramsay Hunt syndrome• Hyperacusis

Page 51: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Stylomastoid foramen

Pons

Medulla

Spinal cord

6th nucleus

7th nucleus

Facial muscles

Nerve to stapedius

GG

Page 52: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Pons

Medulla

Spinal cord

VG

Va

Vb

Vc

SUPERIOR ORBITAL FISSURE

FORAMEN ROTUNDUM

FORAMEN OVALE

6

5

7

5

Facial muscles

N to S

Tongue

Relationship between V and VII

CHORDA TYMPANI

GG

Page 53: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.
Page 54: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

9

10

11

‘Aldermanic’ nerve

Page 55: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Upper limbs

• Visual inspection– Wasting, fasciculation, tremor, chorea, burns

• Test tone– ‘cogwheel’, ‘clasp knife’, lead pipe’

• Power – main myotomes / muscle groups– Grade 1–5 out of 5

• Coordination (need power)– “finger-nose”, dysdiadochokinesis

• Reflexes– Supinator, biceps, triceps

• Sensation– L/T, joint position, vibration, pin-prick, temperature

Page 56: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

Lower limbs• Visual inspection

– Wasting, fasciculation, tremor, burns, trophic changes• Test tone, clonus• Power – main myotomes / muscle groups

– Grade 0–5 out of 5• Coordination (need power)

– “heel-shin”, “tapping foot”• Reflexes

– Abdominal, knee, ankle, plantar• Sensation

– Include testing for sensory level over abdomen/chest– (Perianal sensation, anal tone)– Romberg’s test: proprioception NOT cerebellum

• Gait

Page 57: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

“Other neurology to test”

• Higher mental function– Speech, memory, recognition, numeracy,

emotion

• Sympathetics and parasympathetics

• Disorders of micturition

• Urinary and faecal continence

• Disorders of sexual function

Page 58: Demystifying the neurology examination. Aims Introduce the principles underpinning a structured neurological examination Revise some neuroanatomy Show.

• Cranial nerves

• Arms• Legs

• Higher mental function

• Observation Ex/Pyr• Tone C/Sp• Power C/Sp• Co-ordination Cblr• Reflexes• Sensation

– Light touch – Proprioception D/Col – Vibration sense

– Pin prick S/Thal– Temperature

• Gait