Anatomy
NCS
EMG
Potpourri
Neuromuscular
100

What is the only muscle exclusively innervated by the C5 nerve root

Rhomboids

100

How will SNAPs be affected in ALS? 

Unaffected.  ALS is a motor neuron disease 

100

What type of fibers does needle EMG test?

Type 1a (large, myelinated)


100

Distinguishing characteristic of conduction velocity changes between acquired and congenital neuropathies

uniform slowing across non entrapment sites is typical of a congenital process

100

What is the pathophysiology of Lambert Eaton? 

Autoimmune reaction with antibodies against PRESYNAPTIC v-gated Ca channels -> prevents influx of Ca -> decreased vesicle release of ACh into synaptic cleft 

200

What is the most proximal muscle innervated by the common peroneal nerve?

Short head of the biceps femoris? 

200

Which muscle is classically evaluated with the H-reflex

Gastrocnemius 

Electrical correlate of S1 tendon ankle reflex

200

A 28 year old male sustained a work related accident when he was carried into a table saw by a chain on the medial proximal leg. What are the descriptive characteristics of the first MUAPs that are seen in the earliest evidence of reinnervation?

low amplitude, highly polyphasic, fast firing rate

- nascent MUAP

200
Which of the following according to your surgical co-resident has the highest sensitivity for carpal tunnel syndrome?

Durkan's test- compression at the wrist on the median nerve for 30 s. Developed in 1991. Sensitivity 87% vs phalen 85% with specificity both at 96%. Together 94% and 96% respectively.

200

Which drug class is most commonly associated with drug-induced Parkinsonism

Antipsychotics.  Especially first generation (ie: Haldol)

- Related to anti-dopaminergic action causing extrapyramidal side effects

300

Which of the following is innervated by a nerve other than the obturator nerve?  And what nerve? 

Adductor magnus, longus, brevis

Adductor magnus is partially innervated by the sciatic nerve

300

What type of neuropathy is seen in electrodiagnostic testing in alcoholic neuropathy?  

Axonal sensory motor polyneuropathy

300

Which of the following MUAP characteristcs would be unexpected in apatient with high suspicion for myopathy: low amplitude, long duration, polyphasicity, early recruitment

Long duration

300

What is the optimal rise time of MUAP?

500 microseconds

300

What is the net effect of pregnancy on the course of multiple sclerosis?  (increases, decreases, neutral) 

Neutral 

Decrease in relapse during pregnancy 

Higher than normal relapse during first 3 months post-partum

400

Where is the suprascapular nerve entrapped if there is isolated infraspinatus weakness?  

Spinoglenoid notch


400

In the newborn, nerve conduction velocities are approximately what percentage of adult values?

50% due to incomplete myelination.  


400

You find CRDs in numerous muscles in a patient. In your knowledge you know that CRDs have the highest odds ratio in which of the following: plexopathy, mononeuropathy, polyneuropathy, motor neuron diseases, and myopathy.

Bonus: what is the pathophysiological key word that may appear on boards describing the pathophysiology of CRDs

Myopathy


Ephaptic: coupling of adjacent nerve fibers caused by the exchange of ions between the cells. "Pacemaker"

400

You are seeing a patient in the ICU with acute proximal weakness. He has normal sensory and motor NCS with exception of an absent F wave. What is one caveat that needs to be present for the absent F wave to have clinical significance?

The patient needs to be awake and alert: anterior horn cell is susceptible to suprasegmental inhibitory influences . . i.e. sedation
400

A healthy man and a healthy woman have a child diagnosed with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy.   What is the chance that their next child will have Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy?  

25%  

DMD is X-linked recessive.  Man does not carry gene and woman is a carrier.  

Causes absence of dystrophin, a protein responsible for connecting the cytoskeleton of muscle fibers -> progressive muscle weakness

500

What are the 5 classic entrapment locations of the median nerve?  

Ligament of strutters - medial epicondyle to 

Bicipital aponeurosis - attachment to ulna

Pronator teres 

Anterior interosseous nerve

Carpal tunnel

500

How does a cold limb affect the amplitudes of CMAPs and SNAPs?  What is the physiologic explanation of this?

Increases the amplitudes of CMAPs and SNAPs

Na channels are open longer during depolarization

500

You have somehow obtained a MR neurography prior to needle EMG stating inflammation in the posterior division of the lumbosacral plexus. Which muscle should not be affected? Iliopsoas, gracilis, vastus medialis, sartorius

gracilis: anterior division off the L2-L4 anterior rami of the obturator nerve

All others are femoral nerve -posterior division

500

A patient asks you to explain the pathophysiology and likelihood of nerve recovery. You luckily have a laboratory report done intraoperatively stating, "Axon severed but endoneurium intact". What is the Seddon and Sunderland classification?

Seddon: grade 2 - axonotmesis

Sunderland: grade 2: highest optimal grade for recovery

500

Which type of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) has the latest presentation?  

Which type of SMA has the worst prognosis?  

(Type I, II, III) 

Loss of lower motor neurons with progressive muscle wasting

Type I (Werdnig Hoffman) - onset 0-6mo, "floppy baby", respiratory failure, most do not live past 2yo

Type II (Dubowitz)  - onset 6-18 months, variable severity, dec life expectancy but can live to adult hood 

Type III (Kugelberg-Welander) - onset >12 months, able to walk at some time, life expectancy generally unaffected