100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Neurology lecture notes

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
40
Uploaded on
20-11-2023
Written in
2023/2024

Summary of neurological conditions as covered in the Oxford Clinical Handbook. Contains information about clinical features of each condition, as well as relevant diagnostic tests and investigations, risk factors, causes and management guidelines. Everything has been cross referenced with passmedicine or Zero to finals and management is referenced with NICE guidelines

Show more Read less
Institution
Course











Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Connected book

Written for

Institution
Study
Unknown
Course

Document information

Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Neurology
Uploaded on
November 20, 2023
Number of pages
40
Written in
2023/2024
Type
Summary

Subjects

Content preview

Patterns of Neurological Disease
UMN lesions: damage anywhere along the corticospinal tracts
- Affects groups rather than individual muscles
- Spasticity (velocity-dependent) Muscle weakness grading
- Hyperreflexia Grade 0 = no muscle contraction
- Upgoing plantars (+ Babkinski sign) +/- clonus Grade I = Flicker of contraction
Grade II = Some active movement
LMN lesions – damage anywhere from the anterior horn cells Grade III = active movement against
distally, including nerve roots and peripheral nerves. Pattern of gravity
weakness corresponds to muscles supplied by involved neurones Grade IV = active movement against
- Wasting resistance
- Fasciculation Grade V = normal power
- Hypotonia/flaccidity
- Reduced or absent reflexes

Possible to have mixed UMN/LMN e.g. MND, B12 deficiency

Sensory deficits
Pain and temperature = anterolateral (spinothalamic) tracts in the cord and brainstem
Joint position and vibration = large dorsal columns


Major neurotransmitters + associated drugs
Neurotransmitter Drugs increasing activity (agonists) Drugs decreasing activity (antagonists)

Dopamine – acts Pramipexole, levodopa, apomorphine (PD) Chlorpromazine (schizophrenia)
on receptors D1-5, Cabergoline (hyperprolactinaemia, Metoclopramide (anti-emetic)
affects mood + acromegaly)
reward-seeking Inhibition of dopamine signalling may
lead to drug induced parkinsonism
Serotonin – many Lithium – mood stabiliser Ondansetron – nausea
receptor types, Sumatriptan – migraine Mirtazapine – depression
multiple effects Buspirone – partial agonist, anxiety Olanzapine, clozapine – schizophrenia
Fluoxetine, sertraline – reuptake
inhibitors, depression
Amino acids – Gabapentin, valproate – GABA agonists, Memantine – glutamate antagonist,
glutamate and epilepsy and neuropathic pain dementia
aspartate act as Benzodiazepines – GABA agonist, sedation
excitatory Baclofen – GABA agonists, spasticity
transmitters on Alcohol – GABA agonist
NMDA and non-
NMDA receptors
ACh – multiple Pilocarpine – peripheral agonist, glaucoma Ipratropium – peripheral antagonist,
receptors classed Anticholinesterases – myasthenia asthma
into muscarinin Atropine – peripheral antagonist,
and nicotininc Donepazil, galantamine, rivastigmine – incontinence, dilate pupils, increase HR
types acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, dementia
Procyclidine, trihexyphenidyl – drug-
induced Parkinsonism
Histamines and Cyclizine – antihistamine, nausea

, purines
Neuropeptides – Exogenous opioids Aprepitant – decreased chemotherapy-
includes opioids related nausea by blocking substance P
and substance P receptors
Noradrenaline, Clonidine (refractory hypotension)
adrenaline TCA and venlafaxine


Cerebral blood supply
Internal carotid arteries
Anterior 2/3 brain and basal ganglia
Can cause total infarction in these areas, or more often similar to MCA occlusion

Circle of Willis
Fed by 3 arteries: ICAs + basilar artery (posteriorly, formed by joining of two vertebral arteries)




Cerebral arteries
ACA + MCA = branches of ICA
In 80% the basilar artery divides into the two PCAs

ACA – frontal and medial part of cerebrum. Occlusion may cause a weak, numb contralateral leg +/- similar
(if milder) arm symptoms
Facial sparing
Bilateral infarction is a rare cause of paraplegia

MCA – supplies lateral part of each hemisphere
Occlusion may cause
- Contralateral hemiparesis
- Hemisensory loss
- Contralateral homonymous hemianopia
- Cognitive change: including dysphasia
- Visuo-spatial disturbance
PCA – supplies the occipital lobe

,Occlusion gives contralateral homonymous hemianopia (often with macula sparing)

Vertebrobasilar circulation
Supplies cerebellum, brainstem, occipital lobes
Occlusion may cause: hemianopia, cortical blindness, diplopia, vertigo, nystagmus, ataxia, dysarthria,
dysphasia, hemi/quadriplegia, unilateral or bilateral sensory symptoms, hiccups, coma
Locked in syndrome – damage to ventral pons due to pontine artery occlusion
Lateral medullary syndrome – occlusion of one vertebral artery or posterior inferior cerebellar artery
causes infarction of the lateral medulla and inferior cerebellar surface

Subclavian steal syndrome
Subclavian artery stenosis proximal to origin of the vertebral artery may cause blood to be stolen by
retrograde flow down this vertebral artery down into arm causing brainstem ischaemia typically after use
of the arm

Neuropathies
Autonomic neuropathy
May be isolated or part of generalised sensorimotor peripheral neuropathy

Causes
- DM
- Amyloidosis
- GBS
- Sjogren’s
- HIV
- Leprosy
- SLE
- Toxic
- Genetic
- Paraneoplastic

Signs
Sympathetic: postural hypotension,  sweating, ejaculatory failure, Horner’s syndrome
Parasympathetic: constipation, nocturnal diarrhoea, urine retention, ED, Holmes-Adie pupil

Investigations
- BP: Postural drop of > 20/10 mmHg is abnormal
- Bladder pressure studies
- Paraneoplastic antibodies

Primary autonomic failure
Occurs alone, as part of multisystem atrophy, or with PD, typically in middle-aged/elderly man.
Onset: insidious, symptoms as listed previously

, Headaches

History
Onset
Rapid onset
- SAH – sudden onset, worst-ever headache, often occipital, stiff neck, focal signs, decreased
consciousness
- Meningitis – fever, photophobia, stiff neck, purpuric rash, coma. May be associated with neck
stiffness – do LP and start abx
- Encephalitis – fever, odd behaviour, fits, reduced consciousness. Do urgent CT head and LP for signs
of infection
- Post-coital headache

Subacute/gradual onset
- Venous sinus thrombosis: subacute headache, papilloedema
- Sinusitis – dull, constant ache over frontal/maxillary sinuses with tenderness +/- postnasal drip.
Worse on bending over, common with coryza
- Tropical illness e.g. malaria, travel hx, flu-like illness, typhus
- Intracranial hypotension: CSF leakage e.g. iatrogenic after LP or epidural. Suspect if headache worse
on standing, treat with epidural blood patch over leak, if conservative management with IV fluids
and caffeine fails

Character
Tight band  tension headache (usual cause of bilateral, non-pulsatile headache +/- scalp muscle
tenderness)
Throbbing/pulsatile/lateralising  migraine

Frequency
Headaches that recur tend to be benign
- Migraine
- Cluster headache
- Trigeminal neuralgia
- Recurrent meningitis – suspect if fever/meningism with each headache

Duration
Chronic, progressive headaches can indicate  ICP: typically worse on waking, lying, bending forward, or
coughing
Also: vomiting, papilloedema, seizures, false localising signs, odd behaviour
Inv: do imaging to exclude space-occupying lesion and consider idiopathic intracranial hypertension
LP contraindicated until after imaging

Associated features
- Eye pain
o Acute glaucoma  constant pain around one eye, reduced vision, haloes, red congested eye
- Jaw claudication
o GCA – subacute onset headache with ESR > 40
o Exclude in all > 50 yrs with headache lasting > few weeks, prompt diagnosis to avoid
blindness
Precipitating causes
- Head trauma – commonly localised pain but can be more generalised. Lasts around 2wks and often
resistant to analgesia
$11.08
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
saskiahogan

Also available in package deal

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
saskiahogan University of Edinburgh
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
1
Documents
23
Last sold
2 year ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions