Stroke of Genius
Seize the Day
Nerve-racking Disorders
Mind Matters
Head Case
Movement Disorder Madness
Neuro Infectious Chaos
100

A transient episode of neurologic dysfunction without infarction lasting <24 hours.

What is TIA?

100

Brief staring spells with 3 Hz spike-and-wave pattern on EEG.

What is absence seizure?

100

Acute unilateral facial paralysis including forehead involvement.

What is Bell palsy?

100

Most common cause of dementia with beta-amyloid plaques.

What is Alzheimer disease?

100

Unilateral throbbing headache with photophobia and nausea.

What is migraine?

100

Most common type of tremor.

What is essential tremor?

100

CSF findings in bacterial meningitis.

What is low glucose, high protein, neutrophils?

200

IV alteplase is typically given within this time window from symptom onset.

What is 4.5 hours? (3 hrs also accepted)

200

Seizure lasting >5 minutes or recurrent without recovery.

What is status epilepticus?

200

Ascending paralysis with areflexia following infection.

What is Guillain-Barré syndrome?

200

Resting tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity due to dopamine deficiency.

What is Parkinson disease?

200

Severe unilateral periorbital pain with lacrimation and rhinorrhea.

What is cluster headache?

200

Resting tremor, rigidity, bradykinesia.

What is Parkinson disease?

200

Temporal lobe hemorrhagic encephalitis is caused by this virus.

What is HSV-1?

300

Contralateral face/arm weakness greater than leg weakness with aphasia suggests this vascular territory.

What is the middle cerebral artery (MCA)?

300

First-line treatment for active generalized tonic-clonic seizure in hospital.

What is IV lorazepam?

300

Autoimmune disorder with antibodies to ACh receptors causing fatigable weakness.

What is myasthenia gravis?

300

Hallmark of frontotemporal dementia.

What is personality/behavior change?

300

Triptans are contraindicated in this condition.

What is ischemic heart disease?

300

Antipsychotic-induced involuntary movements.

What is tardive dyskinesia?

300

HIV patient with ring-enhancing brain lesions most likely diagnosis.

What is toxoplasmosis?

400

Vertigo, ataxia, diplopia, and dysarthria point to this type of stroke.

What is a posterior circulation stroke?

400

Most common cause of new-onset seizures in elderly.

What is stroke?

400

Proximal weakness that improves with use.

What is Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome?

400

Diagnostic/therapeutic test in suspected normal pressure hydrocephalus that predicts response to shunting.

What is large-volume lumbar puncture (tap test)?

400

Obese woman with headache, papilledema, normal imaging, elevated opening pressure.

What is idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH)?

400

Autosomal dominant disease with chorea and caudate atrophy.

What is Huntington disease?

400

Most sensitive test for neurosyphilis.

What is CSF VDRL?

500

Lacunar stroke syndromes are most commonly caused by this.

What is chronic hypertension leading to lipohyalinosis?

500

Seizure-like activity with normal EEG and often asynchronous movements.

What is psychogenic nonepileptic seizure (PNES)?

500

Progressive motor neuron disease with both UMN and LMN signs.

What is amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)?

500

Classic triad of Wernicke encephalopathy.

What is ophthalmoplegia, ataxia, and confusion?

500

Imaging finding in idiopathic intracranial hypertension.

What is normal brain imaging with possible empty sella?

500

Contralateral flinging movements due to subthalamic nucleus lesion.

What is hemiballismus?

500

Organism causing meningitis in elderly and immunocompromised with rhombencephalitis.

What is Listeria monocytogenes?