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NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010
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NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

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Page 1: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY IIITrauma, Stroke and Toxins

Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D.

September 27, 2010

Page 2: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Disease and Trauma of the Peripheral Nerves

Page 3: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Dermatomes are the regions on the body that

correspond with specific cranial or spinal nerves.

Damage to a nerve will cause loss of sensation and motor function in that region of the body.

Page 4: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Guillain-Barre Syndrome involves demyelinization of peripheral nerves

http://www.monografias.com/trabajos37/sindrome-guillain-barre/Image8645.jpg

Page 5: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Adaptation to Sensory Loss:

Blindness

See link: http://www.the-scientist.com/blog/display/55315/

Page 6: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.
Page 7: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Anatomy of the Visual System

http://www.kellogg.umich.edu/theeyeshaveit/anatomy/visual-pathway.html

Page 8: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

The Braille Alphabet

Page 9: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Governor Paterson of New York is legally blind. He does not read Braille, but he does have a tremendous memory.

To be legally blind, a person must have vision worse than 20/200 in their best eye, or a visual field of 20 degrees or less.

Page 10: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Injury and Trauma to the CNS

Page 11: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://dailyme.com/gallery/medical-condition/head-injury.html

Page 12: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

from http://www.cureparalysis.org/faq/spine.gif

Injury to the spinalcord causes loss offunction below the lesion site.

Causes:45% motor vehicle18% falls17% violence13% sports, esp. diving

Who:80% maleAvg age 31.5 yrs.

Page 13: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Sequence of events following spinal cord injury

• Spinal shock – transient (hours to days) loss of reflexes in area below lesion. Muscles become flaccid, motor function lost due to injury & inflammation. May lose sympathetic tone.

• Reflexes gradually return over the next few days to weeks. – Axons of surviving cells begin to recover

• Patient may experience hyperreflexia, as normal inhibitory signals that descend down the spinal cord are blocked by the injury. Gradually stabilizes.

Page 14: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Sensory pathways cross to the opposite side of the spinal cord or

medulla before ascending to the cortex.

http://thalamus.wustl.edu/course/bsen1.gif

Page 15: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

From: McPhee, Lingappa, Ganong & Lange Pathophysiology of Disease 1995

Injury to one side of the spinal cord can cause loss of function on both sides of the body.

Page 16: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Concerns with spinal cord injury

• Loss of function below site of lesion – may be complete or partial, depending on the injury.

• Loss of thermoregulation

• Pressure wounds

• Autonomic dysreflexia

Page 17: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Stroke:Hemorrhagic and Ischemic

Page 18: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Adaptations to Maintain Brain Blood Flow

• Anastomoses – interconnections between blood vessels, compensate for blocked vessels.

• Autoregulation:– Myogenic autoregulion brain blood vessels dilate in

response to a fall in blood pressure, and constrict in response to an elevation in blood pressure

– Metabolic autoregulation – matches brain bloodflow to metabolic activity

– Helps maintain blood flow if vessel is partially occluded.

Page 19: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.
Page 20: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://ww2.heartandstroke.ca/images/english/stroke_isc_web.jpg

Page 21: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://ww2.heartandstroke.ca/images/english/stroke_hem_web.jpg

Page 22: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Neurotoxins

• Organophosphates

• Strychnine poisoning

• Tetanus toxin

• Heavy Metals– Lead– Mercury

Page 23: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://www.environmentalhealthnews.org/ehs/newscience/depressed-about-pesticides/

Organophosphate pesticidesinhibit acetylcholinesterase.

Page 24: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.
Page 25: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://www.drugstoremuseum.com/sections/level_info2.php?level=1&level_id=74

Strychnine

http://animalpetdoctor.homestead.com/PoisonRat.html

Strychnine blocks the activity of glycine, an inhibitory neurotransmitter.

Page 26: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Tetanus

A soldier dying from tetanus. Painting by Charles Bell in the Royal College of Surgeons, Edinburgh.

Page 27: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Heavy Metals

• Lead

• Mercury– Elemental mercury (quicksilver)– Methylmercury

Page 28: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1247191/pdf/ehp0112-000987.pdf

Intelligence quotient as a function of lifetime average blood lead concentration.

Koller, et al. Recent Developments in Low-Level Lead Exposure and IntellectualImpairment in Children. Envtl. Health Persp. • VOLUME 112 | NUMBER 9 | June 2004

Page 29: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://www.ghana-mining.org/ghweb/en/pmu-mssp/mer-abate.html

Elemental mercury is used in artisanal gold mining

Page 30: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://www.worstpolluted.org/projects_reports/display/56

Page 31: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

http://www.nimd.go.jp/archives/english/tenji/a_corner/a03.html

Page 32: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

1. Gait disturbance, loss of balance (ataxia), speech disturbance (dysarthria)

2. Constriction of the visual fields

3. Stereo anesthesia

4. Muscle weakness, muscle cramp

5. Loss of hearing

6. Disturbance of sense of pain, touch or temperature.

Adverse effects to nervous system caused by methylmercury.

http://www.nimd.go.jp/archives/english/tenji/a_corner/a03.html

Page 33: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Lupus and the nervous system

• About 10-15% of people with lupus have CNS effects, typically fatigue, headaches, disorientation.

• More common: peripheral neuropathy, typically as a result of vasulitis. Pain, loss of function of extremities, esp. feet. Sometimes autonomic systems is affected as well.

Page 34: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.
Page 35: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.
Page 36: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.
Page 37: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.

Spi

nal

Cor

d

Organ

{

NT= acetylcholine receptor= nicotinic

Neurotransmitters and receptors of the autonomic nervous system

Parasympathetic (cholinergic)Sympathetic (adrenergic)

Preganglionic neuron

Organ

Preganglionic neuron

Postganglionic neuron

NT= acetylcholine receptor= nicotinic

Spi

nal

Cor

d NT = acetylcholine receptor = muscarinic

NT = norepinephrine receptor= or ß adrenergic

Postganglionic neuron

Page 38: NEUROPATHOPHYSIOLOGY III Trauma, Stroke and Toxins Nancy Long Sieber, Ph.D. September 27, 2010.