CN Palsies
CN Palsies
Spinal Cord
Spinal Cord
Peripheral Neuropathy
100

Which CNs have nuclei in the brainstem? Which part of the brainstem for each?

III,IV = Midbrain

V,VI,VII,VIII = Pons

IX, X, XI(?), XII = Medulla

100

bulbar muscles are heavily involved in what action? What is the risk when our bulbar CNs get injured?

Swallowing, risk of aspiration or asphyxiation. 

100

Name which spinal cord tracts are sensory or motor

Corticospinal
Spinothalamic
Corticobulbar
Dorsal Column Medial Lemniscus

Bonus: what kinds of sensation? motor to what muscle groups?

Corticospinal - motor (most skeletal movement)
Spinothalamic - sensory. pressure & crude touch (anterior), pain & temperature (lateral)
Corticobulbar - motor (CNs, facial expression & bulbar muscles)
Dorsal Column Medial Lemniscus - sensory (vibration, fine touch, proprioception

100

UMN pathology results in _______, while LMN pathology results in _______.

Spasticity/rigidity, Flaccid paralysis.

Remember that in complete SCI, starts with flaccid paralysis, hyporeflexia then devolves into spasticity, hyperreflexia. (dont ask me why)

100

what is the "classic distribution" in polyneuropathies?

Stocking-glove distribution (longest axons affected first). Sensory symptoms prior to motor symptoms, usually.

200
palsy of which CN would result in medial deviation of the eye resulting in diplopia?


II
III
IV
VI

VI - Abducens

200

Which of the following physical exam tests examine function of CNIII?

Pupillary Light Reflex
Eyelid elevation
Accommodation
H Test

A palsy of CNIII results in what?

All!

Globe deviates down and out
only working muscles are lateral rectus (CNVI) & superior oblique (CNIV)

200

Bilateral quadriparesis and Bilateral sensory loss in a "cape-like distribution" would involve which of the following?

Anterior Cord Syndrome
Posterior Cord Syndrome
Central Cord Syndrome
Brown Sequard Syndrome

Central cord syndrome.

Tx with immobilization, PT/OT. Surgery uncommon. 

200

Explain how neurogenic shock can happen with SC injuries

With some spinal cord injuries, it can disrupt the autonomic nervous system, preventing information from arterial baroreceptors from being received -> loss of compensatory sympathetic tone -> bradycardia/hypotension

Commonly associated with SCI above T6, greater risk the higher you go.

200

You have a 7 year old patient who is brought in by his concerned mom for being "clumsy" and not being able to play sports with his friends. on exam, you notice paresis with resisted dorsiflexion, and a noticeably high arch in the foot that doesn't flatten with weightbearing. What dx are you concerned about, and what should you ask the mom?

Concern for Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, ask mom if there is any family history. (hereditary, most common demyelinating polyneuropathy).

Tx is mostly supportive eg. (normal life expectancy, loss of ambulation is rare)

300
a patient on your family med rotation has presented for "facial numbness". after getting your history and physical, which showed an absent corneal reflex and a lateral jaw deviation to the left, you are fairly sure this is trigeminal nerve palsy. When you present to your preceptor, which side of the face do you tell them the lesion is on?

Left

In trigeminal nerve palsies involving jaw deviation due to mandibular branch involvement (Muscles of mastication), the jaw deviates toward the side of the lesion. 

300

A CN palsy of the right CN XII would result in tongue deviation _____ the site of injury.

tongue deviation towards the side of palsy


also ipsilateral facial paralysis, dysphagia, dysarthria 

300

The lateral horn of the spinal cord is not found at every level of the spine. However, it is found on 17 segments. Which segments is it found in?

T1-L2 = Sympathetic chain
S2-S4 = Parasympathetic chain

*the lateral horn holds autonomic cell bodies*

300

In regards to CN VII, how can we differentiate an upper motor neuron lesion vs a lower motor neuron lesion?

upper facial muscles (eg. forehead, eyebrow) have bilateral UMN innervation with one LMN

Lower facial muscles have one UMN, one LMN. 

UMN lesion = upper facial muscles spared, lower facial muscles affected

LMN lesion = all facial muscles on one side affected.

300

unlike other polyneuropathies, _______ distribution is NOT based on axonal length, and can initially affect proximal and distal muscles. 

Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP)


Whats the MRI sign name? (think Shrek)

400

The vagus nerve is involved in the rise of the palate and uvula during swallowing and speaking. In a left CN X palsy, which way would the uvula deviate?

right (deviates away from side of lesion)


since the right side is unaffected it continues to rise and pulls uvula towards it. 
400

A patient presents to you with a 2 week onset of intermittent shocks of pain in the face, particularly on the left side. He seems to note that this recurs throughout the day with eating/drinking or brushing teeth. He has no neurological deficits or complaints. What CN is likely involved and how do we diagnose/treat? 

Trigeminal neuralgia.

Dx is a clinical diagnosis but a cause can often be found on MRI (eg. tumors, MS), get MRI if concerning symptoms (other neuro deficits eg hearing loss)

treat with carbamazapine (sodium channel blocker anticonvulsant)

400

Name what types of neural tissue (eg. motor/sensory/autonomic) is present at each site of the spinal cord

Dorsal Horn
Dorsal Column
Lateral Horn
Lateral Column
Ventral Horn Ventral Column
Dorsal Rami
Ventral Rami
White Rami
Grey Rami

Horn = Gray matter = cell bodies, unmyelinated axons
Column = White Matter = myelinated axons

Dorsal Horn - Sensory
Dorsal Column - sensory
Lateral Horn - autonomic cell bodies
Lateral Column - mixed sensory/motor
Ventral Horn - motor
Ventral Column - sensory/motor
Dorsal Rami - sensory (skin on back)/motor (deep back musc.)
Ventral Rami - sensory/motor (everything else)
White Rami - preganglionic symp. neuron axon, myelinated
Grey Rami - postganglionic symp. neuron axon, unmyelinated.

400

Name where each of the following spinal cord tracts decussate

Spinothalamic tract (both ant/lateral div)
DCML
Anterior Corticospinal tract
Lateral Corticospinal tract

Spinothalamic = spinal cord
DCML = medulla
Anterior Corticospinal = spinal cord
Lateral corticospinal = medulla

Way to remember:
SPINOthalamic decuss. at SPINAL cord, DCML = DeCussates at MeduLLa.

Lateral corticospinal tract starts with an L, so it goes along with DCML (decuss. at medulla). Anterior needs a buddy so they go along with spinothalamic (decuss at SC)

400

A 28 year-old female presents to the clinic complaining of a "prickly sensation" that started bilaterally in her feet two days ago and difficulty walking. She now has the dysesthesia from her mid-thigh down to her toes. On physical examination she has diminished pain and temperature sensation, absent reflexes, loss of proprioception in her legs bilaterally, and muscle strength is 1+/5+ in the lower extremities and 5+/5+ in the upper extremities. What is the most likely diagnosis?


A Guillain-Barré syndrome
B Multiple sclerosis
C Myasthenia gravis
D Spinal cord compression

Guillain-Barré syndrome

500

Name the afferent and efferent limbs for each of the following reflexes

Pupillary light reflex
Accomodation
Corneal reflex (blink)
Gag reflex
Vestibuloocular reflex

Pupillary light reflex - II(a), III(e)
Accomodation - II(a), III(e)
Corneal reflex (blink) - V1(a), VII(e)
Gag reflex - IX(a), X(e)
Vestibuloocular reflex - VIII(a), III, IV, VI (e)

500

Compare and contrast Ramsay-Hunt Syndrome and Bell Palsy. How do each present? How do we treat?

Ramsay Hunt:
-Caused by VZV. (shingles of geniculate ganglion)
-Classic triad: Ear Pain, Vesicles in auditory canal/external ear, ipsilateral facial paralysis
-treat with antivirals, eyepatch (decrease corneal abrasion risk)

Bell Palsy:
-Acute idiopathic CN VII palsy, usually entire face on one side. (does not spare forehead)
-Treat with short course of steroids? Eye patch too.
-tend to resolve within 1mo

500

Brown sequard syndrome is due to a lateral hemisection of the spinal cord, meaning all tracts on one side affected. If the left side is affected, which side will have sensory deficits, and which side will have motor deficits/paresis? Why?

Left side: paresis/paralysis (Lateral corticospinal tract decussates at medulla so ipsilateral side affected) as well as loss of sensation to fine touch, proprioception, vibration (DCML decussates at medulla)

Right side: Sensory loss to pain and temperature (spinothalamic tract decussates at SC), 

500

Anterior cord syndrome would produce what types of motor and sensory deficits?

Motor: BIL paralysis below site of lesion (both anterior and lateral corticospinal tracts end up in ventral horn)

Sensory: Loss of pain, temperature sensation below site of lesion (anterior spinothalamic tract)

DCML, corticobulbar tracts spared. May have autonomic dysfn if lateral horn involved. 


500

A 72 year-old man with a long-standing history of
diabetes mellitus, renal insufficiency, and hypertension presents to the clinic complaining of burning and tingling pain in his feet. What's your next step?

A) EMG/NCS
B) Recommend OTC NSAIDs/Tylenol/ASA
C) Rx Amitriptyline
D) Lab panel to determine cause 

C) Rx Amitriptyline

SNRIs, TCAs, Gabapentinoids for peripheral neuropathies. Apparently Amitriptyline particularly for diabetic neuropathy.

EMG/NCS unnecessary d/t obvious explanation
NSAIDs will kill his kidneys
Obvious cause = no labs necessary, but maybe to get A1c to manage DM.