Paralysis vs. paresis
Paralysis - complete loss of muscular action
Paresis - muscle weakness or partial paralysis
3 sets of muscle groups regulated by motor regulation
CNS area involved in planning
cerebral cortex
CNS area involved in command
motor cortex (motor strip)
CNS area involved in organizing muscle groups
basal nuclei
CNS area involved in adjustment
cerebellum
CNS area involved in associations
brainstem
CNS area involved in pathways
spinal cord
CNS area involved in final transmission
peripheral nerves
7 aspects of motor exam
Spasticity vs. rigidity
Spasticity: velocity related increase in tone
- hypereflexia
Rigidity: increased constant resistance to passive movement
- normal reflexes
Somatosensory modalities: 2 major sensory modalities
Higher mental function neurological exam
3 questions of neurologic exam
Tools for recording the neurologic H & P
History matrix
Localization matrix
Motor scales, strength, and DTRs
History matrix
Symptom timeline
Collateral factors/descriptors
Localization matrix
Enter a circle (◯) if the structure could be involved
Localization tips: muscle
weakness, atrophy
Localization tips: NMJ
weakness increases with exam
Localization tips: peripheral nerve
multiple modalities in area of one nerve
Localization tips: spinal cord
regional symptoms/signs (s/s), fit the distribution of a tract
Localization tips: brainstem
cranial nerve, consciousness, motor + sensory signs
Localization tips: deep white matter and lateral thalamus
hemimotor/hemisensory s/s
Localization tips: cortical lesions
complex processing