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Approach to Neurological Disease

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Dr. Surat lecture, This is the last lecture before going to study aboard.
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Thinking like neurologist Is it difference? Dr. Surat Tanprawate, MD, FRCP(T) Northern Neuroscience Center Chiangmai University
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Page 1: Approach to Neurological Disease

ThinkinglikeneurologistIsitdifference?

Dr.SuratTanprawate,MD,FRCP(T)NorthernNeuroscienceCenter

ChiangmaiUniversity

Page 2: Approach to Neurological Disease

ThinkinglikeaNeurologist

Where‘sthelesion?

What’sthelesion?

Page 3: Approach to Neurological Disease

Seriesofstepstocollectdata

Chiefcomplaint

History

Confirma4onoflocaliza4on

Tippingthepoint

Task Goal

ReviewofPa4ent‐specificfeature

Listoftheproblems

Neurologicalexamina4on

Complaintexplorer

RankoforderofLikelihoodofpossibledisease Differen4aldiagnosis

Page 4: Approach to Neurological Disease

Complexbrainprocessing

Page 5: Approach to Neurological Disease

Chiefcomplaint

“Tippingthepoint”

5

Page 6: Approach to Neurological Disease

ComponentofChiefComplaint

Symptom(s)orSyndrome

+

Timecourse(progressive,stable,fluctua4on)

Onset(sudden,acute,subacute,chronic)

6ExpandtheideaCollectthe

rightdata

Page 7: Approach to Neurological Disease

Thepointshouldbeconcerned

• Avoidovergeneraliza4on• Avoidmisinterpretsymptoms• Avoidincompletechiefcomplaint• Avoidsteptothepresentillnessbeforehavinganideaflowchart

7

Page 8: Approach to Neurological Disease

Commonmisinterpretsymptoms

• PalalysisVSnumbness

• DizzinessVSweaknessVSFa4gueVSataxia

• DysphasiaVSdysarthria

• BlurvisionVSDiplopia

• Blackout:lossofconsciousnessVSlossofvisionVSsimpleconfusion

Page 9: Approach to Neurological Disease

9

Expandtheidea“Symptomatology

approach”

Page 10: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symptomsapproach‐1

• Disorderofconsciousness– Levelofconsciousness– Contentofconsciousness

• Mentaldisorder– Memory– Intelligence– Personality– Behavioral– Demen4a

• HighercorQcalfuncQondisorder– Apraxia,aphasia,agnosia,

others

• Visualdisorder– Visualloss– Diplopia

Inyourhead

Page 11: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symptomsapproach‐2

• Languageandspeechdisorder– Dysarthria– Dysphasia

• Lowercranialnervedisorder– Deafness/4nnitus– Ver4go– Balance/staggering– Swallowing– Voicechange

Inyourhead

Page 12: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symptomsapproach‐3

• Sensorydisorder– Paindisorder

• Headacheandfacialpain

• Otherspaindisorder

– Numbness/4ngling

• Motordisorder– Weakness:eachpart

– Movementdisorder

• Sphincterdisorder

Inyourhead

Page 13: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symptomsapproach‐4

• Episodicdisorder– Seizure/epilepsy

– Syncope

– TIA

– Abnormalmovement

– Migraine

Inyourhead

Page 14: Approach to Neurological Disease

• MulQplecranialnervesyndrome

“syndromeofopthalmoplegia”

“syndromeofLowerCNinvolvement”

• Brainstemsyndrome

“Suddenonsetplusbrainstems/s”

Syndromeapproach‐1

• Parkinsonism– Bradykinesia

– Musclerigidity

– Res4ngtremor

– Posturalinstability

14

Page 15: Approach to Neurological Disease

Syndromeapproach‐2

• Spinalcordsyndrome– Transversecordsyndrome(complete,incomplete)

– Hemicordsyndrome

– Anteriorcordsyndrome

– Posteriorcordsyndrome

15

• Cerecellarsyndrome‐ Pancerebellarsyndrome

‐ Hemicerebellarsyndrome

‐ Cerebellarvermissyndrome

Page 16: Approach to Neurological Disease

Example

16

Page 17: Approach to Neurological Disease

17

PaQentHistory

Page 18: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symptomatology

18

Difficulttoopenhiseye

Page 19: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symptomatology

19

Doublevision“Diplopia”

Page 20: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symptomatology:Eyeliddisorder

• Lidabnormali4espresentsas–Ptosis–Lidretrac4on–Insufficienteyelidclosure–Excessiveeyelidclosure

20

Page 21: Approach to Neurological Disease

21

Ptosis

WeaknessofLevatorpalpebrae

muscle

Excessiveeyelidclosure

Mullermuscle:Horner’ssyndrome

•Blephalospasm•Hemifacialspasm

Contrac4onofobicularisoculi

muscle

Page 22: Approach to Neurological Disease

22

Ptosisapproach

Page 23: Approach to Neurological Disease

Ptosis

Neurologicptosis

Non‐neurogenic(mechanical)ptosis

•Uni‐bilateral•Par4al‐complete

•Pupilinvolvement•EOMimpairment

Supranuclearlesion(cerebralptosis)•Contralateralcerebralhemisphere

LMN•Neuropathic(N,fascicle,CN)•NMJ•Myopathic

Congenitalptosis

Horner’ssyndrome

Page 24: Approach to Neurological Disease

24

Druginducedblephalospasmanddyskinesia

Page 25: Approach to Neurological Disease

25

Superior tarsal muscle

(also known as

Müller's muscle)

Page 26: Approach to Neurological Disease

26

Page 27: Approach to Neurological Disease

27

Awomanpresentwithdoublevision

Page 28: Approach to Neurological Disease

28

Diplopiaapproach

Page 29: Approach to Neurological Disease

Diplopia

Binoculardiplopia

Monoculardiplopia:

Mostlyopthalmologiccondi4on

Non‐misalignment:intermiient,non‐

organic

Misalignment

ComitantstrabismusChildhoodstrabismus

Incomitantstrabismus

MostlyNeuro‐opthalmologic

disease

Page 30: Approach to Neurological Disease

• Supranuclear(UMN)• FEF: horizontal conjugate

gaze• Diffuse frontal and

occipital: vertical conjugate gaze

• Internuclear• Nuclear and pathway

• PPRF, abducen interneuron, MLF

• riMLF, INC, PC

• Nuclear(LMN)• Cranial nerve nuclei

• Fascicle, Nerve, NMJ and Muscle(LMN)• Faciculus• Cranial nerve• NMJ• Muscle

Page 31: Approach to Neurological Disease

Diplopia:ThinkingIdea• Direc4onofinvolvedmuscle

– Impairconsistentwithnerveinnerva4on(Nerve,nucleus)

– ifnot• Fluctua4on:NMJ

• Associatedwithproximalmuscleweakness:Muscledisease

• Ver4calgazeorHorizontalgazepathwayinvolvement:Internuclearlesion

31

Page 32: Approach to Neurological Disease

32

EyeexaminaQon

Page 33: Approach to Neurological Disease

33BilateralponQneinfarcQon

Page 34: Approach to Neurological Disease

34

Awomancomplainsslowprogressivediplopia,gaitdifficultyfor2weeks

Page 35: Approach to Neurological Disease

35

Eyemovement

Page 36: Approach to Neurological Disease

• Supranuclear(UMN)• FEF: horizontal conjugate

gaze• Diffuse frontal and

occipital: vertical conjugate gaze

• Internuclear• Nuclear and pathway

• PPRF, abducen interneuron, MLF

• riMLF, INC, PC

• Nuclear(LMN)• Cranial nerve nuclei

• Fascicle, Nerve, NMJ and Muscle(LMN)• Faciculus• Cranial nerve• NMJ• Muscle

Page 37: Approach to Neurological Disease
Page 38: Approach to Neurological Disease

38

Page 39: Approach to Neurological Disease

39

Gaitabnormality

Page 40: Approach to Neurological Disease

40

AtaxiaGait

disturbance =

Page 41: Approach to Neurological Disease

41

Tandemwalk

Page 42: Approach to Neurological Disease

42

Cerebellartest

Page 43: Approach to Neurological Disease

Approachtoataxicpa4ent

Ataxic symptoms?-Nystagmus-Dysarthria-Trunkcal ataxia-Limb and gait -ataxia

Ataxic symptoms mimicker?

Ataxia: disease other than cerebellum

Cerebellar’s disease-Where’s the lesion (cerebellum, cerebellar peduncle, cerebellar tract) -What’s the lesion

True Ataxia•Mildweakness•Apraxia•Abnormalmovement

Page 44: Approach to Neurological Disease

Where’slesion?

Associatedsign

Pure cerebellum

ClassifiedCerebellarsyndrome

WithBrainstem

signs

ClassifiedBrainstem

Syndrome?

With mild hemiparesis

Involve fronto-Ponto-CerebellarPathway“Ataxic hemiparesis”

Page 45: Approach to Neurological Disease

Cerebellar hemispheric syndrome

Rostral vermis

syndrome

Caudal vermis

syndrome

Pancerebellar syndrome

Unilateral intermediate, lateral zones

Ant, sup vermis

Flucculonodular, post vermis

All regions

Classifiedcerebellarsyndrome

Page 46: Approach to Neurological Disease

Symmetricalataxiaplussyndrome

• Acquired– Wernicke’sencephalopathy

– MillerFishersyndrome

– Normalpressurehydrocephalus(frontallobeataxia)

• Hereditary– Spinocerebellarataxia(SCA)

Page 47: Approach to Neurological Disease

Backtoourcase

47

Nuclearcomplexofoculomotor

nerve

Rostralvermissyndrome

Page 48: Approach to Neurological Disease

48

Page 49: Approach to Neurological Disease

PhysicalExaminaQon

“Confirmthethough,explorethenext”

49

Page 50: Approach to Neurological Disease

NeurologicalexaminaQon• Screening(general)neurologicalexaminaQon– Exameverypath:thetestsaremoresensi4ve

• Specific(focused)neurologicalexaminaQon– Examthedetailofabnormalneurologicalsignsorsymptomsrelevanttothehistoryandscreeningexam.

– thetestsaremorespecific

50

Page 51: Approach to Neurological Disease

Recordtheneurologicalsigns

• PresenceVSAbsence

• HardsignsVSSonsigns

• NormalVSabnormal• Lateralizingsign:

• TrueVSfalselocalizingsign

• Normalvaria4on

51

Page 52: Approach to Neurological Disease

Generalneurologicalexamina4on

• Mentalstatus• Cranialnerve

– 1‐12CNfunc4on

• Limb– Voluntarymovement

– Muscle:bulk,tone,power– Coordina4on:FTN,HTS,rapid

alterna4ngmovement

– Reflex:tendon,plantarresponse

– Sensa4on:pinprick,JPS,vibra4onsense

• Gaitandbalance• Rombergtest

Page 53: Approach to Neurological Disease

Thepointshouldbeconcerned

53

• Avoidmisinterpretsign• Misinterpretthenormalvaria4on• Confirmtheequivocalsign• Awarethesonsign• Awarethefalselocalizingsign

Page 54: Approach to Neurological Disease

54

Amanpresentedwithshakinghead

Page 55: Approach to Neurological Disease

55

Anoldwomanpresentwithabnormalhandmovement

Page 56: Approach to Neurological Disease

56

FocusedneurologicalexaminaQon

• Whichkindoftest–Dependon:History,Screeningneurologicalexamina4on

–Completethefocusedexamina4on:• Moredetail

• Completethesyndromeyouthought

• Needextensiveskillforspecifica4on

Page 57: Approach to Neurological Disease

Conceptof“son”neurologicalsign

• “Hardsign”:– neurologicalsignresultfromalesionataknownsiteorthataffectaknownpathway

• “Sonsign”:– Anystructuralorfunc4onaldevia4onfoundmorefrequentlyinbrainimpairmentpersonsthaninnormalpersons

– Doesnotcorrelatewithanypar4culartypeofbrainlesionatanypar4cularsite,orinterrup4onofanypar4culartract

Page 58: Approach to Neurological Disease

Conceptof“false”localizingsign

• TruesignthatoccurssecondarytoalesionelsewhereintheCNS.

• Thesignisnotfalse,butisdistantfromtheactualsiteofprimarylesion

• Cause:– Shinofbrain:compressordisplacestructure(distant)orbloodvessel(ACA,MCA)

– Hydrocephalus:CN6palsy,Pretectal(sylvian)syndrome

Page 59: Approach to Neurological Disease

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Page 60: Approach to Neurological Disease

Problemlist

“ReviewofpaQentspecificfeature”

60

Page 61: Approach to Neurological Disease

ListofproblemsIntegrateofHistoryandPE

• First:anatomicallocaliza4onoflesionorneurologysystem–Focal,Mul4‐focal,Diffuse–Nuclear,tract,systemdisorder–CNS,PNS,Boths

Page 62: Approach to Neurological Disease

DifferenQaldiagnosisDiscussioneachproblemlist

• 1)

• 2)

• 3)

• 4)

• 5)

Page 63: Approach to Neurological Disease

DifferenQaldiagnosis

“Rankofthepossibledisease”

63

Page 64: Approach to Neurological Disease

DifferenQaldiagnosisIntegrateofHistoryandPE

• First:anatomicallocalizaQonoflesionorneurologysystem– Focal,Mul4‐focal,Diffuse

– Nuclear,tract,systemdisorder

– CNS,PNS,Boths

• Second:causeoflesion– Congenital,Gene4c

– Trauma

– Tumor

– Infect/Inflamma4on

– Vascular– Toxic/metabolic/Nutri4onal

– Degenera4on/Demyelina4on

– Idiopathic

– Psychogenic

Page 65: Approach to Neurological Disease

Seriesofstepstocollectdata

Chiefcomplaint

History

Confirma4onoflocaliza4on

Tippingthepoint

Task Goal

ReviewofPa4ent‐specificfeature

Listoftheproblems

Neurologicalexamina4on

Complaintexplorer

RankoforderofLikelihoodofpossibledisease Differen4aldiagnosis

Page 66: Approach to Neurological Disease
Page 67: Approach to Neurological Disease

Combine it together

Page 68: Approach to Neurological Disease

Thank you for your

attention.

www.neurologycoffeecup.com


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