Headaches
List 4 red flags for a serious headache
Any 4 of:
Sudden onset, thunderclap character
RICP headache - morning with nausea, worse lying down/sneezing/coughing
Hx of malignancy, immunosuppression
A/w systemic symptoms - fever, rash, meningism, B symptoms
Focal neurological signs
What vessel is ruptured in a subdural haemorrhage? In whom does this usually occur?
Subdural - bridging veins (usually elderly or infants)
List 6 drugs that can be used to treat an acute attack of migraine
PANTOP
Paracetamol
Antinauseants
NSAIDs
Triptans
Opioids
Paracetamol + antinauseant (e.g. metochlorpramide)
What are cerebral contusions and the subtypes?
A primary, focal injury to the CNS causing the brain to move and be crushed by violent contact with the skull or dura membranes
COUP LESIONS = contusions occurring at the site of impact (same side of impact)
CONTRECOUP LESIONS = contusions occurring opposite to the site of impact (other side of head)
Where are the bridging veins located? If ruptured, where would the haematoma be?
Subdural haemorrhage
What is a LMN lesion? How do they present compared to an UMN lesion?
LMN signs - hyporeflexia, hypotonia, paralysis/paresis, muscle atrophy
UMN signs - hyperreflexia, hypertonia, clonus, paralysis/paresis, Babinski
Give examples of primary and secondary headaches.
Can you describe the characteristics?
Primary: migraines (throbbing, pulsatile, aura), tension (band-like tightness usually worse at end of day), cluster, trigeminal neuralgia
Secondary: haemorrhage, cerebral venous thrombosis, reversible cerebral vasoconstriction syndrome, toxins, infection (meningitis/abscess), extracranial
What is an epidural haemorrhage? How do they present? How does it occur?
Rupture of middle meningeal artery in epidural space
Initial loss of consciousness immediately after head injury
Regain consciousness and return to baseline
Then rapidly decline
Commonly due to skull fracture
What does the middle cerebral artery supply and how might someone with an MCA stroke present?
Lateral cortex - frontal (motor, Broca), parietal (sensory), temporal (Wernicke)
Weakness upper limbs > lower, contralateral
Contralateral hemisensory loss
Broca or Wernicke in DOMINANT only
Which tumour is histologically described as a 'fried egg with chickenwire capillaries'
Oligodendroglioma
What are the 2 main types of hydrocephalus?
Obstructive (non-communicating) most common type due to blockage of CSF pathway from ventricles to subarachnoid space
Communicating (non-obstructive) due to impaired reabsorption of CSF at arachnoid villi along dural venous sinus, usually due to SAH or infection
Clinical features of a patient with trauma to the corticospinal tract? What would they report below the level of the lesion?
Ipsilateral weakness below the level of the lesion
Corticospinal tract runs from cortex, decussates in medulla, then descends down spinal cord to LMN innervating the limbs. Since it decussates in the brainstem, the symptoms will be on the ipsilateral side to the lesion.
Which of the following CANNOT cross suture lines? Why?
A: Epidural haemorrhage
B: Subdural haemorrhage
C: Subarachnoid haemorrhage
Epidural haemorrhages CANNOT cross suture lines (skull sutures are the areas where the dura is most tightly adhered to)
Subdural haemorrhages are below the dura and CAN cross suture lines
What are embryonal tumours? Histological feature?
Medulloblastoma (primitive neuroectodermal tumours)
Primitive small cells that resemble the multipotential cells of the developing foetal brain
Homer Wright Pseudorosettes - no true lumen, eosinophilic centre
In prolonged hydrocephalus, how can patients present? What is the treatment?
Gait apraxia/magnetic gait
Dementia
Urinary incontinence
Place a ventriculoperitoneal shunt to drain excess CSF from ventricles into systemic circulation through peritoneum
What are 4 types of brain herniation?
Cingulate (subfalcine) under falx cerebri
Transtentorial (central)
Uncal
Cerebellar tonsillar herniation into foramen magnum
Describe the pathway up the spinothalamic tract. If there was a spinal cord lesion, what would expect to see clinically BELOW the lesion?
Axons enter spinal cord via dorsal root ganglion
Synapse at substantia gelatinosa of spinal cord with 2nd order neurons at that level (therefore, a lesion here will produce contralateral hemisensory loss below this point as it decussates at the level)
2nd order neurons decussate and ascend as anterior (crude touch, pressure) and lateral (pain, temperature)
Synapse with 3rd neurons in ventral posterolateral nucleus
Travels through posterior limb of internal capsule and corona radiata
To primary somatosensory cortex
What is a lacunar infarction? How does it occur?
Hyaline arteriolosclerosis of lenticulostriate arteries supplying the basal ganglia, internal capsule, thalamus
A/w hypertension and diabetes
Pure sensory (thalamus)
Pure motor (internal capsule)
Sensorimotor (mixed)