neurological examination

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Neurological Examination

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Neurological Examination. What comes first?. As with any system the first thing that should be done before commencing the examination is to ___________. For the neurological system the review questions are: Headache or facial pain? Fits, faints or funny turns? Dizziness or vertigo? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Neurological  Examination

Neurological Examination

Page 2: Neurological  Examination

What comes first?As with any system the first thing that should be done before commencing the examination is to ___________.For the neurological system the review questions are:

1. Headache or facial pain?2. Fits, faints or funny turns?3. Dizziness or vertigo?4. Disturbances of vision hearing or smell?5. Speech and swallowing difficulties?6. Disturbed sensation?7. Weakness?8. Tremor and involuntary movements?9. Loss of bladder/bowel control?10.Gait disturbances?

It is also vital to note the temporal course of the illness

take a history

Page 3: Neurological  Examination

Motor SystemInspection:• Look at the overall positioning of the patient, looking especially for hemiplegic positioning (flexion of elbow and wrist with extension of knee and ankle)• Muscle wasting – compare both sides• Look for fasiculations

• Test muscle tone – ensure the patient is relaxed and repeat each movement at different speeds. This can be surprisingly difficult to evaluate.

Page 4: Neurological  Examination

Motor SystemArms:Basic Screening Examination

Nerve Root Movements ReflexC5 Shoulder abduction, elbow

flexionBiceps

C6 Elbow flexion (semipronated) SupinatorC7 Finger extension, elbow

extensionTriceps

C8 Finger flexors Finger T1 Small muscles of the hand No reflex

Page 5: Neurological  Examination

Motor SystemLegs:Basic Screening Examination

Nerve Root Movements ReflexL1, L2 Hip flexion No reflexL3, L4 Knee extension Knee L5 Dorsiflexion of foot,

inversion/eversion of ankle, extension of hallux

No reflex

S1 Hip extension, knee flexion, plantarflexion of foot

Ankle

Page 6: Neurological  Examination

Sensory SystemThere are five basic modalities of sensation:

Modality Tract Fibre SizeVibration Sense Posterior

columnLarge

Proprioception Posterior column

Large

Light Touch Posterior column and Spinothalamic tract

Large and Small

Pin Prick Spinothalamic tract

Small

Temperature Spinothalamic tract

Small

Page 7: Neurological  Examination

Sensory SystemThe sensory exam should cover the relevant dermatomes, starting ________and working your way__________.

distallyproximally

Page 8: Neurological  Examination

Sensory SystemThere are four individual nerves which are commonly affected in the upper limb. It is worth knowing their sensory distribution.

RadialUlnar

Median

Page 9: Neurological  Examination

Sensory SystemThere are four individual nerves which are commonly affected in the upper limb. It is worth knowing their sensory distribution.

Axillary

Page 10: Neurological  Examination

Sensory SystemThere are also four individual nerves which are commonly affected in the lower limb. It is worth knowing their sensory distribution.

Page 11: Neurological  Examination

CoordinationA coordinated series of motor actions is needed to produce a smooth and accurate movement. This requires the integration of sensory feedback and motor output which occurs mainly in the __________.Loss of joint position sense can produce incoordination, especially with the eyes closed, thus it is necessary to test proprioception before coordination.

What to do:• Test the patient’s gait• Finger-nose test• Repeated movements (hand tap)• Heel-shin test• Feet tap

cerebellum

Page 12: Neurological  Examination

Higher FunctionHigher function is a term used to encompass thought, memory, understanding, perception and intellect. Higher function testing can be divided into the following parts:• Attention• Memory (immediate, short, long)• Calculation• Abstract thought• Spatial• Visual and body perception

Page 13: Neurological  Examination

Attention and OrientationOrientation:• Time: What day is it? What’s the date? The month, year? What is the season?• Place: What is the name of the place we are at? What is the name of the ward/hospital? What is the name of the city/town?• Person: What is your name? What is your job? Where do you live?

Attention: Digit spanTell the patient you want them to repeat some numbers that you give them. Start with simple sequences of 3 to 4 numbers and increase until the patient makes several mistakes at a certain number of digits. Then ask the patient to repeat the numbers you say backwards.• Normal = seven forward, five backwards.

Page 14: Neurological  Examination

MemoryImmediate recall:Tell the patient a name and address, e.g. Josh Graham, 18 Bromide Street, Broken Hill. Ask them to repeat it back to you immediately.

Short term recallAfter about 5 minutes ask the patient to recall the name and address.

Long term recallTest factual knowledge that you would expect the patient to have. This varies greatly from patient to patient and needs to be modified carefully. Example general knowledge questions include: Name an American president that was shot dead, what are the colours on the Australian flag, etc?

Page 15: Neurological  Examination

CalculationSerial sevensAsk the patient to subtract 7 from 100 and to take another seven from what remains. Note the time taken to do the calculations and mistakes made.The premorbid intelligence should also be taken into consideration, for example a mistake made by a maths professor would carry greater significance.

Doubling threesThis should be done if the patient admits to difficulty to calculations. Ask what is two times three. And twice that, and so on. Note how high the patient can go and how long it takes.

Page 16: Neurological  Examination

Abstract ThoughtThis tests for frontal lobe function and is particularly useful in frontal lobe lesions, dementia and psychiatric illness.

Ask the patient to explain well know proverbs. For example:• A rolling stone gathers no moss• People in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones

The correct interpretation is normal

A physical interpretation such as ‘the stone just rolls down so moss doesn’t stick’ or ‘throwing stones will break the glass’ indicates concrete thinking.

Another useful test is to ask the patient to describe the differences between objects e.g. A table and a chair.

Page 17: Neurological  Examination

SpatialThis tests for parietal and occipital lobe function.

Clock face:Ask the patient to draw a clock face and fill in the numbers. Ask them to then draw on the hands at a given time, for example quarter past eight.

Five pointed starAsk the patient to copy this five pointed star

Normal= accurate clock and starHalf clock missing= visual inattentionUnable to draw clock or star= constructional apraxia

Page 18: Neurological  Examination

Visual and body perceptionThis is another test for parietal and occipital lesions. Useful in dementias

Facial recognition: ‘famous faces’Take a bedside newspaper or magazine and ask the patient to identify the faces of famous people. Choose people the patient would be expected to know, e.g. the prime minister, the queen, etc

Normal= faces recognisedFaces not recognised= propagnosia

Body perception:• Patient ignores one side and unable to find hand if asked (Hemi-neglect)• Patient does not recognise left hand if shown it (asomatagnosia)• Patient is unaware of weakness on affected side and will often move the unaffected side when asked to move the affected.

Page 19: Neurological  Examination

Visual and body perceptionBody perception:Ask the patient to show you their index finger, ring finger and so on. Failure is termed finger agnosia

Ask the patient to touch their left ear with their right hand. Cross their hands and ask which is the right hand. Failure is termed left/right agnosia

Ask the patient to close their eyes and place a familiar object e.g. Coin, pen in their hand and ask them to identify it. Failure is termed astereognosis

Ask the patient to close their eyes and write a number or letter on their palm and ask them what it is. Failure is termed agraphaesthesia

Page 20: Neurological  Examination

ApraxiaApraxia is an inability to perform a task when there is no weakness, incoordination or movement disorder to prevent it. This tests for parietal function and the premotor cortex of the frontal lobe. It is very useful in dementias.

Ask the patient to perform an imaginary task‘Show me how you would comb your hair, drink a cup of tea, strike a match and blow it out’

The patient is able to perform the action = NormalThe patient is unable to initiate the action, though understanding the command = Ideational apraxiaThe patient performs the task but makes errors = ideomotor apraxia

Page 21: Neurological  Examination

ApraxiaThe three hand testAsk the patient to copy your movements and demonstrate:1) Make a fist and tap it against the table thumb up2) Straighten your fingers and tap the table with your thumb up3) Place your palm flat on the table

If the patient cannot perform this in the presence of normal motor function = limb apraxia.

Page 22: Neurological  Examination

Patterns of focal lossLobe Alteration in

higher functionAssociations

Frontal Apathy, disihibition • Contralateral hemiplegia, • Broca’s dysphasia (dominant hemisphere) • Primitive reflexes

Temporal Memory • Wernicke’s dysphasia• Upper quadrananopia

Parietal Calculation, perceptual and spacial orientation (non-dominant hemisphere)

• Apraxia• Homonymous hemianopia• Hemisensory disturbance• Neglect

Occipital Perceptual and spatial orientation

• Hemianopia