Diabetic CN III Neuropathy
Somatic fibers: innervates superior, inferior, and medial rectus, inferior oblique, and levator palpebrae
Parasympathetic fibers: innervates the sphincter of the iris and ciliary muscle —–> fixed, dilated pupil and loss of accomodation
Symptoms: “down and out” gaze, ptosis (unopposed action of the lateral rectus and superior oblique)
- Intact pupillary response and accommodation.
Todd’s palsy
preceded by a focal motor seizure
Carotid artery thrombosis
Lacunar stroke - pure motor hemiparesis
Presentation: unilateral motor deficit (face, arm, and to a lesser extent leg), mild dysarthria
- No loss of sensory, visual, or higher cortical function
Lacunar stroke - pure sensory stroke
Presentation: unilateral numbness, parasthesias and hemisensory deficit involving the face, arm, trunk, and leg
Lacunar stroke - ataxic hemiparesis
Lacunar infarction of the anterior limb of the internal capsule
Presentation: weakness that is more prominent in the lower extremity, along with ipsilateral arm and leg incoordination
Lacunar stroke - dysarthria-clumsy hand syndrome
Lacunar stroke at the basis of the pons
Presentation: hand weakness, mild motor aphasia
- NO sensory abnormalities
Migraine treatment and prophylaxis
Antiemetics: prochlorperazine, chlorpromazine, and metaclopramide
Prophylaxis: amitriptyline, propranolol
Basal ganglia hemorrhage
Symptoms: contralateral hemiparesis and hemisensory loss, homonomyous hemianopsia, gaze palsy
Cerebellar hemorrhage
- Facial weakness, ataxia, nystagmus, occipital headache, and neck stiffness
Thalamic hemorrhage
Symptoms: contralateral hemiparesis and hemisensory loss, non-reactive miotic pupils, upgaze palsy, eyes deviate towards hemiparesis
Cerebral lobe hemorrhage
Symptoms: Contralateral hemiparesis (frontal lobe), contralateral hemisensory loss (parietal lobe), homonymous hemianopsia (occipital lobe), eyes deviate away from hemiparesis, high incidence of seizures
Pons hemorrhage
Symptoms: deep coma and total paralysis within minutes, pinpoint reactive pupils
Essential tremor
Treatment: propranolol; second-line: primidone and topiramate
Parkinson’s disease tremor
Tetrad: resting tremor, rigidity, postural instability, and bradykinesia
Cerebellar tremor
-Can see postural, action, or intention tremors
Physiologic
Brain death
Status epilepticus
Neurofibromatosis type 2
severe variant - Wishart - framshift or nonsense mutations
milder variant - Gardner - missense or splice-site mutation
Primary sclerosing cholangitis
Clinical features: fatigue, pruritis
- 90% of pts have underlying IBS, mainly ulcerative colitis
Labs: Aminotransferases
Ascited Fluid Characteristics
Neutrophils: 250 peritonitis (secondary or spontaneous)
Total protein: >or= 2.5 (high-protein ascites) - CHF, constrictive pericarditis, peritoneal carcinomatosis, TB, Budd-Chiari syndrome, fungal
or=1.1 (indicates portal hypertension) - cardiac ascites, cirrhosis, Budd-Chiari syndrome
Blood supply of the brain
Common carotids —> internal carotids —> opthalmic artery and then anterior and middle cerebral arteries
Subclavian arteries —> vertebral a. —> posterior inferior cerebellar a., then anterior spinal a., then basilar a. —> anterior inferior cerebellar a., then pontine a. —> superior cerebellar a., then posterior cerebral a. which connect to circle of willis vis posterior communicating a.
Middle cerebral artery supply
lateral surface of the frontal, parietal, and upper temporal lobes, genu and posterior limb of internal capsule, majority of the basal ganglia, proximal parts of the visual radiations as they emerge from the lateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus and course in Meyer’s loop