CNS DI-Exam I Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in CNS DI-Exam I Deck (191)
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1
Q

What type of a disease is cerebral palsy

A

congenital

2
Q

a group of congenital abnormalities that occur either in utero, during birthing, or during the first two years of life. These abnormalities are non-progressing in nature and can have multiple etiologies. Motor abnormalities are the most prominent presentation of this disease.

A

Cerebral Palsy

3
Q

this disease is also called “brain paralysis” and “static encephalopathy”

A

Cerebral Palsy

4
Q

a defining feature of this disease is that the case occurs prior to complete development of the cerebrum

A

Cerebral Palsy

5
Q

Risk factors of this disease include preterm birth and maternal or fetal infections.

A

Cerebral Palsy

6
Q

Pathophysiology of this depends on the time of onset. Typically, hypoxic-ischemic injury.

A

Cerebral Palsy

7
Q

symptoms of this disease typically involve motor disorders, but may include sensory and cognitive defects as well. Clinical signs may be absent at birth and develop slowly as an infant. Milestone delays are the initial clinical symptoms. Major motor abnormalities include: spasticity, dyskinesis, rigidity. 50% of cases experience seizures

A

Cerebral Palsy

8
Q

Diagnostic testing for Cerebral Palsy includes:

A

history and physical to rule out progressive disorders, US of fetus during pregnancy, MRI scan is most useful,

9
Q

Treatment of Cerebral Palsy includes…

A

goal is to maximize function, so most treatment is symptomatic. Physical Therapy is very important. Medications include: Botulinum toxin, antispasmatics, anticonvulsants

10
Q

Complications of Cerebral Palsy include…

A

hip dislocation due to muscular tone imbalance, difficulty eating and breathing, osteopenia, osteoporosis, chronic MSK pain

11
Q

Chiari Malformation is what type of disease?

A

congenital

12
Q

a dysraphism of the metencephalon.

A

Dandy-Walker Syndrome

13
Q

What is a defect in the formation of the midline in an embryo?

A

Dysraphism

14
Q

This disease features an enlarged posterior cranial fossa, loss of the cerebellar vermis with an enlarged midline fluid-filled, ependymal-lined cyst representing an expanded fourth ventricle

A

Dandy-Walker Syndrome

15
Q

In this disease, on CT you will see a glossy, enlarged fourth ventricle due to the redimentary development of the cerebellum and lack of fusion between the cerebellar hemispheres.

A

Dandy-Walker Syndrome

16
Q

A hallmark of this disease is a rudimentary cerebellum and an enlarged cistern in the posterior cranial fossa

A

Dandy-Walker Syndrome

17
Q

This is due to a failure of closure or a reopening of the previously closed caudal portions of the neural tube

A

Spina Bifida

18
Q

a midline defect in the vertebral posterior arch structures. There is no involvement of neural components

A

Spina Bifida Occulta

19
Q

a midline defect of the vertebral posterior arch structures with herniation of the meninges but not the neural structures

A

Meningocele

20
Q

a midline defect of the vertebral posterior arch structures with herniation of the meninges and neural structures

A

myelomeningocele

21
Q

Prevention mechanisms of spina bifida include

A

folic acid supplementation during pregnancy

22
Q

This form of spina bifida is generally asymptomatic and presents as minor changes in skin present over the diaphragm

A

spina bifida occulta

23
Q

this form of spina bifida is marked by a fluid-filled, cyst-like sac which extends off the back over the region of the dysraphism

A

meningocele

24
Q

this form of spina bifida is marked by numerous organ dysfunctions, cyst-like structures covered by a thin layer of epithelialized material

A

myelomeningocele

25
Q

a rare neurocutaneous disorder (also called phakomatoses)

A

Sturge-Weber Syndrome

26
Q

Encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis is another term for what disorder

A

Srurge-Weber Syndrome

27
Q

Presentation of this disorder includes facial nevus about the eye extending in the opthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve. Glaucoma may also be present in the ipsilateral eye. Patient may also present with developmental delay and learning problems; seizures develop within the first year.

A

Srurge-Weber Syndrome

28
Q

This is caused when the anterior spinal artery infarcts

A

Spinal Artery Infarction

29
Q

The presentation of this includes acute onset, back pain, pain radiating into the legs, focal neurologic changes including: weakness below the level of the lesion, incontinence x 2, analgesia below the lesion level, spared vibratory and proprioception senses

A

Spinal Artery Infarction

30
Q

Which artery runs midline along the spinal cord and is supplied by 5 or 6 medullary arteries that are derived from spinal arteries

A

Anterior Spinal Artery

31
Q

This type of brain injury is almost always non-traumatic in origin, and results in blood entering and contaminating of the CSF

A

Subarachnoid hemorrhage

32
Q

Patients with this report having “the worst headache of their life”; this is usually due to meningeal irritation

A

Subarachnoid Hemorrhage

33
Q

Treatment for a subarachnoid hemorrhage may include…

A

surgical repair of aneurysm, drainage and shunt placement, clot removal and triple H therapy (hemodilution, hypertension, and hypervolemia)

34
Q

This disease is caused by a dysraphism in which defects in the closure of the midline structures related to the metencephalon cause a range of neurological abnormalities involving the posterior cranial fossa

A

Chiari Malformation

35
Q

The main abnormality in this disorder involves displacement of the tonsils of the cerebellum, along the medulla into the foramen magnum

A

Chiari Malformation

36
Q

The two types of Chiari Malformations are…

A

Chiari type I and Chiari type II

37
Q

Chiari type I can also be called

A

Chronic tonsilar herniation

38
Q

This disease is characterized by low-lying cerebellar tonsils (NOT the vermis) extending through the foramen magnum. This can cause obstruction of the CSF. It is strongly associated with syringomyelia

A

Chiari Type I

39
Q

This disease is characterized by bony and dural abnoralities, a small posterior cranial fossa, abnormal midline cerebellum shape with displacement of the cerebellar vermis (NOT the tonsils). The vermis extends down into the foramen magnum

A

Chiari Type II

40
Q

Presentation of this disease is typically asymptomatic in the infant and child with signs and symptoms developing at puberty. The pt. will experience headache, neck pain, urinary frequency, progressive cerebellar ataxia and lower extremity spasticity. Anemic episodes may occur in infants. Older children can present with scoliosis

A

Chiari Type I

41
Q

A 14-month-old male is brought to the pediatrician because he is not able to walk. His mother is very concerned because her friend’s daughter began walking around 12 months of age. He was born at 30 weeks gestation to his 28-year-old G1P1 mother. The pregnancy was complicated by eclampsia requiring emergency Cesarean delivery. The mother also reports her son has difficulty with swallowing. Physical exam is notable for hypertonic muscle tone, absence of selective motor control, and motor delay.

A

Cerebral Palsy

42
Q

This form of Chiari is almost always associated with pediatric hydrocephalus and myelomeningocele

A

Chiari type II (Note: chiari type I may cause adult onset hydrocephalus but hydrocephalus is generally uncommon in this form of the disease)

43
Q

This form of Chiari is strongly associated with syringomyelia, in which patients also have an idiopathic syrinx

A

Chiari type I

44
Q

An infant boy presents with trouble swallowing, bilateral arm and leg weakness, and stridor. The infant was born to a 28-year-old woman who did not seek prenatal care. On physical exam, the infant barely moves his arms and legs and has stridor. A meningomyelocele is appreciated in the lumbosacral area. Magnetic resonance imaging of the head shows downward displacement of the cerebellar vermis and tonsils through the foramen magnum.

A

Chiari Type II malformation

45
Q

An 1-year-old boy is brought to the emergency department by his parents due to increased irritability and an “enlarging head.” The parents deny any trauma but has noticed their infant appears weaker than his sister when she was his age. They did not receive adequate prenatal care due to the distance and cost to arrive to their closest obstetrician. On physical exam, the infant is inconsolable and has an increased head circumference for his age. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head shows hypoplasia of the cerebellar vermis with cystic dilatation of the fourth ventricle leading to a non-communicating hydrocephalus.

A

Dandy-Walker Syndrome

46
Q

an abundance of fluid in the ventricular/subarachnoid compartments of the cranium is known as….

A

hydrocephalus

47
Q

hydrocephalus can be caused by two general mechanisms:

A

the overproduction of CSF or impaired drainage of CSF

48
Q

obstruction of the cerebral aqueduct, secondary to masses or viral infection is one etiology of hydrocephalus. This is called

A

aqueductal stenosis

49
Q

in an infant, abnormal enlargement of the head or accelerated rate of head enlargement is likely due to …

A

hydrocephalus

50
Q

an older child (whose cranium has already closed) with hydrocephalus may present with

A

irritability, lethargy, poor appetite, vomiting, headache

51
Q

a young child (whose cranium is still not closed) with hydrocephaly may present with symptoms that include…

A

brisk tendon reflexes, spasticity, clonus

52
Q

Sturge-Weber Syndrome is what type of disorder?

A

a rare neurocutaneous disorder (aka-phakomatose)

53
Q

Another term for Sturge-Weber Syndrome is…

A

encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis

54
Q

A 5-year-old male presents with an unprovoked convulsive episode that lead to right-sided hemiparesis. On physical exam, a port wine stain is appreciated, affecting the ophthalmic and maxillary division of the trigeminal nerve on the left side of the face. Head CT shows brain calcifications.

A

Sturge-Weber Syndrome

55
Q

A newborn boy is born to a young mother via a normal spontaneous vaginal delivery. She had not had any prenatal care during her pregnancy. On physical exam, the newborn has a large port-wine stain on the left forehead and eyelid. He is also noted to have some shaking episodes. Concerned, the physician obtains an MRI of the head, which shows a leptomeningeal angioma.

A

Sturge-Weber Syndrome

56
Q

A patient with this disorder will present with facial nevus around the eye (and primarily over the V1/V2 area), developmental delay and learning problems, seizures within the first year, glaucoma may be present in ipsilateral eye

A

Sturge-Weber Syndrome

57
Q

What is another term for facial nevus?

A

port-wine stain

58
Q

This disorder is derived from: A vascular abnormality that develops as the primordial vascular supply to the head, brain and face. The abnormality ultimately causes the leptomeninges (arachnoid and pia) to be over vascularized and the brain to be undervasculated . This causes the brain to calcify and atrophy.

A

Sturge-Weber Syndrome

59
Q

A degenerative process of the cerebral cortex resulting in senile dementia is most likely

A

Alzheimer’s Disease

60
Q

When does Alzheimer’s Disease usually present?

A

7th-9th decades of life

61
Q

Diffuse atrophy of the cerebrocortex with ventriculomegaly, sulcal enlargement, hippocampal atrophy, neuritic plaques, neurofibrillary tangles are common signs of what disease?

A

Alzheimers disease

62
Q

Neurofibrillary tangles seen in Alzheimer’s disease contain…

A

hyperphosphorylated tau proteins

63
Q

neuritic plaques (senile plaques) seen in Alzheimers disease contain…

A

A-beta amyloid

64
Q

A 78-year-old man presents to his primary care clinic and is accompanied by his wife. He feels well, but his wife is concerned that he has become more confused over the past few weeks. He enjoys socializing with family and friends, but sometimes has difficulty finding words and recently forgot his niece’s name. He walks around his neighborhood for exercise, but has the tendency to wander and get lost. He has a history of hypertension and atrial fibrillation. Current medications are warfarin and dronedarone. Physical exam is unremarkable. Recent lab results were within normal limits.

A

Alzheimers Disease

65
Q

Common genes involved in Alzheimers Disease are…

A

Presenilin genes (located on chromosomes 1 and 14)

66
Q

A 61-year-old male presents with left-sided hand weakness and trouble with walking. He is not sure why these symptoms occur. On physical exam, tongue fasciculations are appreciated. He has slow speech. The left upper extremity shows forearm atrophy and depressed reflexes. The right lower extremity is hypertonic, with 3+ reflexes, and positive Babinski sign.

A

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

67
Q

Lou Gherig’s Disease is another term for…

A

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

68
Q

If astrocytes fail to remove glutamate from the synaptic cleft, a patient will experience continuous motor neuron activity leading to excitotoxicity, oxidative stress, failure of superoxide dismutase enzymes and cell death. This is the pathogenesis of what disease?

A

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

69
Q

The hallmark of this disease is the death of peripheral motor neurons from the ventral horn and brainstem nuclei as well as the bulbospinal and corticospinal neruons in the brainstem and cerebral cortex. (So…neurons in BOTH the peripheral and central motor systems are effected)

A

Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

70
Q

Which branches of the nervous system remain intact in a patient with ALS?

A

peripheral sensory system, central sensory system, autonomic nervous system

71
Q

Cause of death in an ALS patient is usually due to…

A

respiratory failure

72
Q

Presentation of this disease is initially asymmetric involving one hand and then progresses to symmetric involvement. The pt. will experience cramping of muscles, usually early in the morning.

A

ALS

73
Q

Flaccid weakness, atrophy and fasciculations will be present in an ALS patient due to what type of neuron involvement?

A

Spinal motor neurons

74
Q

In ALS, spastic weakness is due to involvement of what type of neurons?

A

Corticospinal motor neurons

75
Q

A patient with ALS will present with dysphagia, dysarthria and dyspnea due to what type of neuron involvement?

A

Bulbar motor neurons

76
Q

This disease is the classic form of progressive, hereditary spinocerebellar ataxia. It involves significant loss of myelinated fibers in the posterior columns, spinocerebellar tracts and the corticospinal tracts of the spinal cord.

A

Friedreich Ataxia

77
Q

What is the genetic inheritance pattern of Friedreich Ataxia?

A

autosomal recessive mutation

78
Q

This disease is caused by a mutation in the gene named frataxin, which contains expanded GAA triplet repeats

A

Friedreich Ataxia

79
Q

A 23 year old male with a past medical history of diabetes mellitus presents with muscle weakness, staggering gait with frequent falling, dysarthria and a curvature in his upper spine. On physical exam the patient is noted to have marked muscle weakness (2/5 in upper and lower extremitites), a loss of deep tendon reflexes, nystagmus as well as pes cavus and kyphoscoliosis. Patient had a recent ED visit for pneumonia and a bedside ultrasound demonstrated a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

A

Friedreich Ataxia

80
Q

An 8-year-old boy is brought to the pediatrician because his mother is concerned about recent behavioral changes. His mother states that she has started to notice that he is slurring his speech and seems to be falling more than normal. On exam, the pediatrician observes the boy has pes cavus, hammer toes, and kyposcoliosis. Based on these findings, the pediatrician is concerned the child has a trinucleotide repeat disease. Which of the following trinucleotide repeats is this child most likely to possess?

A

GAA

81
Q

This disease is caused by progressive myelin and axon loss from spiocerebellar tracts–>posterior columns –> corticospinal tracts.
Fibrous gliosis is present in these tracks.
There is also loss of Purkinje cells in the cerebellar cortex

A

Friedreich Ataxia

82
Q

The initial complaint in this disease is typically difficulty walking. Patient will eventually present with ataxic signs in bilateral legs, wide spread unstable stance and foot slapping.
Within a few months, arms ataxia presents. Speech slows and becomes softer and uncoordinated respiratory muscles cause chocking.
Tendon reflexes will be abolished; plantar reflexes are extensor with flexor spasm. Pes cavus, hammer toes and kyphoscoliosis develops and 1/2 of cases include cardiomegaly

A

Friedreich Ataxia

83
Q

This general group of disorders presents with: progressive and symmetric limb ataxia, impaired gait and equilibrium, slow voluntary movements, some sensory impairments, scanning speech and dysarthria, nystagmoid eye movements, tremor of the neck and head

A

spinocerebellar ataxias

84
Q

This group of disorders are progressive, degenerative hereditary disorders that may be dominant or recessive. Degeneration is usually seen in the cerebellum, but may include the brainstem and peripheral nerves. There are about 60 forms.

A

Spinocerebellar ataxias

85
Q

a cavity that opens in the spinal cord is known as a…

A

syrinx

86
Q

This disorder presents as an insidious onset, slowly progressing lesion. It may present as scoliosis. Head, neck or back pain is common and there will be a cape like distribution of analgesia. Flaccid weakness at lesion level with spastic weakness below lesion level. Incontinence may be involved.

A

Syringomyelia

87
Q

A syrinx is associated with which form of Chiari Malformation?

A

Chiari Type I

88
Q

a syrinx that is a dilation of the central canal of the spinal cord that fills with CSF is termed…

A

hydromyelia

89
Q

A syrinx that opens in the white matter of the spinal cord and fills with extracellular fluids is termed…

A

a true syrinx

90
Q

an abscess or suppurative infection located between the dural layer and the inner table of the skull is what type of abscess?

A

Epidural Abscess

91
Q

This disease presents with a triad of symptoms: midline dorsal pain, fever, progressive limb weakness

A

Epidural Abscess

92
Q

The most common bacterium that causes an epidural abscess is…

A

Staphylococcus aureus

93
Q

a non-inflammatory demyelination of the pons secondary to the rapid correction of a hyponatremic state or production of a hypernatremic state

A

Central pontine myelinolysis

94
Q

Another term for Osmotic Demyelination Syndrome is…

A

Central Pontine Myelinolysis

95
Q

This disease is largely associated with severe alcoholism. Other associated diseases include renal dialysis and hepatic failure

A

Central Pontine Myelinolysis

96
Q

This disease is caused by rapid correction of hyponatremia to normal or hypernatremic levels.

A

Central Pontine Myelinolysis

97
Q

This disease involves lesions that cause severe demyelination beginning in the center of the pons. There will be reactive phagocytes and glial cells present but NO signs of inflammation. Lesions may also appear in the thalamus.

A

Central Pontine Myelinolysis

98
Q

A patient with this disease will present acutely-subacutely. They will have flaccid paralysis in all four limbs, inability to chew, swallow or speak. Eye movements and facial expressions can be intact. Spasticity will develop and locked in syndrome can present.

A

Central Pontine Myelinolysis

99
Q

A 70-year-old hospitalized patient with a serum sodium of 117 mEq/L is corrected to 140 mEq/L in the next 6 hours. In the subsequent days he becomes paralyzed.

A

Central Pontine Myelinolysis

100
Q

a medical condition, that damages part of the brainstem, in which the body and most of the facial muscles are paralyzed but consciousness remains and the ability to perform certain eye movements is preserved.

A

locked-in syndrome

101
Q

degeneration of the posterior and lateral columns of the spinal cord secondary to a deficiency in vitamin B12. This is a treatable myelopathy

A

Subacute combined degeneration

102
Q

vitamin B12 is also called…

A

cobalamin

103
Q

Treatment for subacute combined degeneration includes…

A

prompt B12 supplements.

Note: changes may be reversible but once complete paraplegia has developed, recovery is poor

104
Q

A 72-year-old man of European ancestry presents for a routine check-up with increased fatigue, a smooth shiney tongue and yellowing of his skin. The man is a strict vegan and refuses to eat anything that casts a shadow. On physical exam you note markedly decreased vibration sensation and proprioception. A peripheral smear is ordered demonstrating large RBC’s as well neutrophils with nuclei that have 7 lobes. This seems to be the start of…

A

Subacute combined degeneration

105
Q

Subacute combined degeneration is also known as

A

Vitamin B12 deficiency

106
Q

A patient with this disease will present with subacute and progressive development of ataxia, numbness and tingling in the lower extremities, often progressing to weakness and spasticity and increased reflexes. Other symptoms include: pernicious anemia, spinal cord myelopathy, diffuse and symmetric presentation, paresthesias in hands and feet, loss of vibratory sense and proprioception, peripheral neuropathy

A

Subacute combined degeneration

107
Q

symptoms of subacute combined degeneration present as:

A

diffuse and symmetrically

108
Q

Failure to transfer even very small amounts of B12 across the intestinal wall is the root cause of…

A

Subacute combined degeneration

109
Q

A deficiency in vitamin B12 can lead to sponngy vacuolation, intramyelininc and interstitial edema of myelin sheaths and their eventual destruction and astrocytosis. This initially effects the heavily myelinated posterior and lateral columns of the spinal cord. This describes the development of what disease?

A

Subacute combined degeneration

110
Q

What are the first spinal cord columns targeted inSubacute combined degeneration?

A

posterior and lateral columns

111
Q

Over the course of Subacute combined degeneration which tracts become demyelinated?

A

large ascending sensory tracts and descending motor tracts

112
Q

a malignant invasive embryonic tumor of the cerebellum most often seen in children and young adults

A

medulloblastoma

113
Q

A 5-year-old child presents with an occipital headache, an ataxic gait, nystagmus, and papilledema

A

medulloblastoma

114
Q

this type of tumor occurs mainly in children and is exclussively in the cerebellum, usually near midline (more lateral if in adults). It is highly malignant.

A

medulloblastoma

115
Q

Common clinical symptoms for this disease are short in durration (only about 3 months). They present as headaches (due to ICP), persistent vomitting (due to ICP), truncal ataxia and spasticity, papilledema (due to ICP), nystagmus

A

medulloblastoma

116
Q

less common symptoms in a patient with medulloblastoma include:

A

limb ataxia and dysiadokokinesia

117
Q

tumors arising from ependymal cells lining the ventricular system of the brain; slow growth; well-differentiated

A

ependymoma

118
Q

the most common tumor of the fourth ventricle

A

ependymoma

119
Q

What are the two most common locations to have an ependymoma?

A
  1. fourth ventricle
  2. supratentorally in the lateral ventricles

(note: it can be anywhere in the ventricular system)

120
Q

A patient under the age of three with this type of tumor will present with vomiting, ataxxia, headache, lethargy, increased head circumfrence, irritability

A

ependymoma

121
Q

An ependymoma usually presents in what stage of life?

A

0-20 years old

122
Q

older children with this type of tumor present with ataxia, nystagmus, gaze palsy, hemiparesis, neck pain

A

ependymoma

123
Q

A 5-year-old boy presents to pediatrics clinic complaining of headaches. His head circumference is large for his age. He has no other complaints and had been growing and developing normally prior to this visit. Vital signs are stable. Physical examination is benign with the exception of increased head circumference.

A

ependymoma

124
Q

slow growing, benign tumors present on the meningeal layers surrounding the brain

A

meningioma

125
Q

a meningioma is most common in which age group and gender?

A

60s-70s; more common in females

126
Q

what type of tumor is commonly found in convexities of the cranium, along the falx or at the base of the skull

A

meningioma

127
Q

What is the recurrence rate of an ependymoma?

A

HIGH! 44%

128
Q

what type of cells is a meningioma most likely derived from?

A

meningothelial (arachnoid) cells

129
Q

This type of tumor is usually a solitary lobulated tumor attached to the meninges. It will likely expand and repace CNS tissue without invading it. It may involve skull tissue.

A

meningioma

130
Q

presentation of this tumor includes: possibly asymptomatic, focal neurologic defects due to compression of structures, seizures, hemiparesis, gait disturbance

A

meningioma

131
Q

the seeding of a distal neoplastic event into the central nervous system is known as

A

metastatic disease

132
Q

The most common cause of neoplasm in the CNS is due to….

A

metastatic disease

133
Q

Most metastatic tumors are extradural and compress the cord. What vessels do these tumors form in?

A

Venous Plexus of Batson

134
Q

What portion of the spin is he most common site for metastasis?

A

thoracic spine

135
Q

Metastatic diseases of the spinal cord are classified by location. What are the possible locations?

A

extradural, intradural extramedullary, intradural intramedullary

136
Q

pain that persists for an arbitrary time that is longer than normal expected time for healing. This is pain without a peripheral generating source and involves plastic changes in the CNS or PNS

A

chronic pain

137
Q

This disease state is characterized by pain of indeterminate duration, refractory to treatment, disrupts sleep and normal living

A

chronic pain

138
Q

disruption in the normal nociceptive pathways of peripheral nerves, spinal cord, brainstem or cerebrum is one mechanism that my cause this disease state…

A

chronic pain

139
Q

plasticity in normal pathways involving sprouting of axons and loss of inhibitory interneurons is on mechanism that may cause this disease state…

A

chronic pain

140
Q

A 28-year-old snow skier strikes a tree and was not wearing a helmet. He loses consciousness for several minutes but later regains consciousness and reports feeling fine. Several hours later his neurological state decompensates acutely. CT showed a lens-shaped, biconvex hyperdense area contained by suture lines

A

epidural hemorrhage

141
Q

This type of bleeding event is usually from a traumatic injury (usually the lateral head). This causes bleeding into the potential space between the dural layer and bone.

A

epidural hemorrhage

142
Q

which vessel is most commonly causing an epidural hemorrhage?

A

meningeal artery

143
Q

In an epidural hemorrhage, between what two layers does blood accumulate?

A

outer dural later and inner cortical bone

144
Q

A patient with this type of injury will briefly lose consciousness, then experience a lucid interval. Then there will be a worsening headache, vomiting and change in mental status. Many focal neurologic signs will occur and progress rapidly to bilateral posturing.

A

epidural hemorrhage

145
Q

A 69-year-old male with atrial fibrillation on warfarin had a syncopal episode and struck his head on the stairs. Shortly thereafter, he because unconsious.

A

chronic subdural hemorrhage

146
Q

an accumulation of extravasated blood located between the inner layer of dura and the subarachnoid membrane.

A

subdural hemorrhage (may be acute or chronic)

147
Q

A major pharmaceutical risk factor for an subdural hematoma is…

A

anticoagulants

148
Q

patients with this type of hemorrhage will present with impaired consciousness, HA, focal neurologic defects, aphasia, hemiparesis, bradycardia and hypertension, unilateral pupillary dilation and oculomotor palsy

A

acute subdural hemorrhage

149
Q

a collection of clotted blood and fibrotic material located between the inner layer of dura and the subarachnoid membrane

A

chronic subdural hemorrhage

150
Q

This disease state is slowly progressing and may present days to weeks after minor head trauma. The patient will appear confused and have impaired consciousness, focal neurological deficits, dysphasia, unilateral papillary dilation and oculomotor paresis

A

chronic subdural hemorrhage

151
Q

what vessels are likely involved in a subdural hemorrhage?

A

bridging cortical veins

152
Q

On CT, a subdural hemorrhage will appear like…

A

crescent shaped, concave hyperdensity that can extend across suture line

153
Q

this type of subdural hemorrhage is often associated with additional signs of cerebral trauma

A

acute

154
Q

common surgical treatment for hydrocephalus includes…

A

shunt placement

155
Q

presentation of this disease state includes increased ICP, unsteady gait, bladder incontinence, confusion

A

hydrocephalus

156
Q

a common cause of obstructive hydrocephalus

A

tumor

157
Q

a common cause of communicating hydrocephalus

A

meningeal inflammation due to tumor cells or hemorrhage

158
Q

hydrocephalus ex vacuo is commonly caused by

A

brain atrophy

159
Q

this type of hydrocephalus is due to decreased/impaired reabsorption of CSF. This occurs without CSF-flow obstruction between the ventricles and subarachnoid space

A

communicating hydrocephalus

160
Q

this type of hydrocephalus is due to obstructed flow of CSF. This may be due to stenosis at a narrow point of the ventricular system

A

noncommunicating hydrocephalus

161
Q

this type of hydrocephalus results from an increase in CSF to compensate for a decrease in brain size.

A

hydrocephalus ex vacuo

162
Q

loss of perfusion or oxygenated blood to part or all of the nervous system is the end stage of what disease state?

A

cerebrovascular disease?

163
Q

an occlusive process that includes the plugging of a vessel. This results in stopping blood flow to tissue past the block.

A

infarctive stroke

164
Q

what is the difference between an embolic or thrombotic stroke? (both are infarctive strokes)

A

embolic-an embolus from another vessel or from the heart passes upward into cerebral vasculature causing an occlusion

thrombotic-this type of strokeoccurs when vessels gradually occlude due to atherosclerosis or lipohyalinization.

165
Q

this type of stroke is usually abrupt in onset and does not progress

A

infarctive stroke

166
Q

3 types of strokes:

A

infarctive, hemorrhagic, diffuse ischemia

167
Q

this type of stroke is caused by failure of a vessel wall leading to vessel rupture and bleeding into surrounding tissue.

A

hemorrhagic stroke

168
Q

this type of stroke can be abrupt and progressive

A

hemorrhagic stroke

169
Q

this type of stroke is due to failure of the heart to keep up sufficient blood flow to the brain

A

diffuse ischemia

170
Q

bleeding within the CNS parenchyma and into the ventricular system results in…

A

intraparenchymal hemorrhage

171
Q

the majority of intraparenchymal hemorrhages are due to this pre-existing condition

A

hypertension

172
Q

The main cause of an intraparenchymal hemorrhage in young people is

A

sympathomimetic drugs (like cocaine)

173
Q

typical locations for spontaneous hypertensive intraparenchymal hemorrhages are:

A

1-basal ganglia
2-thalamus
3-cerebellum
4-pons

174
Q

A vascular abnormality that is highly associated with developing an intraparenchymal hemorrhage is…

A

carotid stenosis

175
Q

These are degenerative disease of the alpha motorneurons in the ventral horn of the cord. These diseases cause extensive motorneuron death with muscle dennervation and atrophy

A

Spinal Muscular Atrophies

176
Q

SMA type 1 is also called

A

Werdnig-Hoffmann disease

177
Q

The severe infantile form of SMA type 1, which usually causes death in early infancy is called…

A

Non-sitters form

178
Q

SMA type 2 in late infantile form is called…

A

Sitters

179
Q

How long do children with SMA type 2 usually live for?

A

Survival into the school years

180
Q

SMA type 3 is also called…

A

Kugelberg-Welander disease

181
Q

The chronic juvenile phase of SMA type 3, in which patients usually survive into the middle ages of life is called

A

Walkers

182
Q

When is the time of onset of SMA type 4?

A

adult-onset

183
Q

What is the genetic inheritance pattern for most types of SMA?

A

autosomal recessive inheritance

184
Q

The gene involved in SMA is the ______.Two copies of this gene are located on chromosome number____.

A
  • Survival of Motor Neurons gene (SMN)

- chromosome 5

185
Q

What are the two copies of the SMN genes involved in SMA?

A

SMN 1 and SMN2

186
Q

Loss or mutation in ____(gene) correlates with SMA.

A

SMN1 gene

187
Q

The number of additional copies of ____(gene) can blunt the expression of SMA.

A

SMN2

188
Q

The following are clinical signs of what disease?
Severe hypotonia

Generalized weakness

Muscle atrophy

Loss of tendon reflexes

Involvement of tongue face and jaw muscles (bulbar muscles)

Intercostal muscle involvement produces bell-shaped thorax with belly breathing

Diaphragm involvement brings respiratory distress

Congenital joint contractures can occur

Sensory nerve involvement has also been noted

Comorbid cardiovascular disorders noted

Cognition is often normal

A

SMA type 1

189
Q

The following are clinical signs of what disease?
Onset between 6 and 18 months

Progressive hypotonic, areflexive weakness, involving legs more so than arms with minimal involvement of the bulbar muscles

Joint contractures

Can sit unsupported bu cannot stand or ambulate unassisted

Scoliosis develops in the longer term patients

Secondary lung restriction

Cognition is normal

Generally patients survive into their third decade

A

SMA type 2

190
Q

The following are clinical signs of what form of SMA?
Progressive weakness involving legs more so than arms

Patients can sit, stand and ambulate alone

Lack bulbar symptoms

Life expectency is normal

A

SMA type 3

191
Q

The following are clinical signs of what form of SMA?Adult-onset mild form

Stands and walks

Normal life span

A

SMA type 4