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Weakness

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Spinal Cord Compression - lower motor neuron (LMN) weakness at the level of the ... Anterior horn cells - the spinal muscular atrophies ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Weakness


1
Weakness
  • Supischa Theerasasawat

2
Content
  • Hemiplegia
  • Monoplegia
  • Paraplegia
  • Proximal weakness
  • Distal weakness

3
Hemiplegia
  • Cortical lesion
  • Subcortical lesion
  • Brainstem lesion
  • Spinal cord lesion

4
Cerebral lesion
5
Cortical lesion
6
Cortical lesion
  • more focal weakness than the weakness seen with
    subcortical lesions
  • signs of cotical dysfunction

7
Nature
  • Vascular abrupt onset
  • Epilepsy progression over seconds to minutes
  • Migraine - progression over seconds to minutes
  • Demyelinating disease - progression over days
  • Mass (tumor or abscess) - progression over weeks

8
Vascular causes
  • MCA contralateral hemiparesis, predominate arm
    hand and face, with signs of cotical dysfunction
    (Rt. Neglect, Lt. aphasia)
  • ACA - contralateral hemiparesis predominate leg,
    bowel bladder involvement
  • PCA - contralateral hemianopia with memory deficit

9
Subcortical lesion
  • Equal weakness of the face, arm, and leg on the
    contralateral side

10
Nature
  • Vascular
  • Lenticulostriate arteries - contralateral
    hemiparesis with little or no sensory involvement
  • Thaiamoperforate arteries - contralateral sensory
    disturbance and movement disorders
    (chorcoathetosis or hemiballismus)
  • Demyelinating disease
  • Multiple Sclerosis - a history of episodes of
    relapsing and remitting neurological deficits
  • Parainfectious Encephalomyelitis
  • Progressive Multifocal Leukocnccphalopathy
    visual loss and weakness, immunocompromise hosts

11
Brainstem lesion
12
Brainstem lesion
13
Spinal cord lesion
  • hemiplegia sparing the face

14
Spinal cord lesion
  • Spinal Hemisection (Brown-Sequard's) Syndrome
    ipsilateral weakness, posterior column and
    contralateral pain and temperature
  • Spinal Cord Compression - lower motor neuron
    (LMN) weakness at the level of the lesion and CST
    signs below the level of the lesion
  • Spinal Cord Infarction spare posterior column

15
Functional Hemiplegia
  • Improvement in strength with coaching
  • Inconsistencies in examination
  • Hoover's sign
  • Paralysis in the absence of other signs of
    motor system dysfunction, including tone and
    reflex changes

16
Monoplegia
  • Cortical lesion
  • Spinal cord lesion
  • Peripheral lesion
  • Neuronopathies
  • Radiculopathies
  • Plexopathies
  • Neuropathies

17
Cortical lesion
  • Vascular
  • Epilepsy
  • Migraine - the headache phase typically begins as
    the neurological deficit is resolving
  • Demyelinating disease
  • Mass

18
Spinal cord lesion
  • the weakness is associated with muscle wasting
    and lost reflexes in a radicular distribution

19
Neuronopathies
  • Weakness without sensory loss
  • Monomelic amyotrophy progressive weakness over
    months to years
  • Poliomyelitis acute asymetrical weakness

20
Radiculopathies
21
Plexopathies
  • Pain
  • Plexitis C5C6
  • Neoplastic plexus infiltration C8T1
  • Diabetic amyotrophy femoral nerve distribution
  • No pain
  • Radiation plexopathy upper brachail plexus
  • Truama
  • upper brachail plexus Erbs palsy
  • lower brachail plexus Klumpkes palsy
  • Thoracic outlet syndromes - lower brachail plexus
  • Plexus hematoma lumbosacral plexus

22
Peripheral nerves of the arms
23
Peripheral nerves of the legs
24
Paraplegia and spinal cord disease
25
  • Intramedullray lesion- suspended sensory loss,
    dissociative sensory loss, sacral sparing, early
    bowel bladder involvement
  • Extramedullary lesion late bowel bladder
    involvement
  • Intradural lesion
  • Extradural lesion local pain

26
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27
Spinal Shock
  • total loss of motor and sensory functions below
    the level of the lesion
  • Temporary loss of spinal reflex below the level
    of lesion

28
Unilateral Transverse Lesion
  • Ipsilatcral weakness and loss of position and
    vibration below the level of the lesion
  • Contralateral loss of pain and temperature caudal
    to the lesion

29
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30
Central Cord Syndrome
  • Loss of sensation in the upper extremities of a
    dissociated type, with loss of pain and
    temperature sensation and preservation of
    position and vibration sensation

31
Anterior Spinal Artery Syndrome
  • Paraplegia, pain and temperature sensory loss
  • Spared posterior column

32
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33
Foramen Magnum
  • Occipital or neck pain
  • Downbeat nystagmus, impaired sensation over the
    upper face, dysarthria, dysphonia, dysphagia
  • Motor system involvement - spastic weakness
  • Begins in the ipsilateral arm and is loll owed by
    weakness of the ipsilateral leg, spreading to the
    contralateral leg and then the arm

34
Upper Cervical Spine
  • Same as foramen magnum
  • Radicular pain
  • C2 - posterior of scalp
  • C3 C4 - top of shoulder

35
Lower Cervical and Upper Thoracic Spine
  • Lesions at the C4-C6 level, pain and sensory
    disturbances - the radial aspect of the arm,
    forearm, and thumb
  • Lesions at the C7-T1 level, pain and sensory
    disturbances - the ulnar aspect of the arm,
    forearm, and thumb
  • Hoffmanns sign

36
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37
Thoracic Levels
  • paraplegia
  • the nipple (T4)
  • the umbilicus (T10)
  • the inguinal ligament (LI)

38
Differentiation of conus lesions from cauda
equina lesions
39
Differential diagnosis of diseases affecting the
spinal cord (compressive)
  • Non-neoplastic
  • Trauma
  • Spondylosis
  • Intervertebral disc herniation
  • Spinal stenosis
  • Infectious disorders (e.g., abscess,
    tuberculosis)
  • Inflammatory (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis,
    ankylosing spondylitis, sarcoid)
  • Spinal hemorrhage
  • Syringomyelia
  • Congenital disorders
  • Arachnoid cysts
  • Paget's disease
  • Osteoporosis
  • Neoplastic
  • Epidural
  • Intradural extramedullar (e.g., meningioma,
    neurofibroma, and leptomeningeal metastasis)
  • Intramedullary

40
Noncompressive myelopathy
  • Demyelinating (e.g., multiple sclerosis, acute
    disseminated encephalomyelitis)
  • Viral myelitis (e.g., roster, acquired
    immunodeficiency syndrome-related myelopathy,
    human T-lymphotropic virus type 1)
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency and other nutritional
    deficiencies
  • Infarction
  • Ischemia and hemorrhage resulting from vascular
    malformations
  • Spirochetal diseases (syphilis and Lyme disease)
  • Toxic myelopathies (e.g., radiation induced)
  • Autoimmune diseases (e.g., lupus, Sjogren's
    syndrome)
  • Paraneoplastic
  • Neuronal degenerations
  • Acute and subacute transverse myelitis of unknown
    cause

41
Proximal and distal weakness
42
Proximal weakness
  • NMJ lesion - fluctuation
  • Myopthy no fluctuation except metabolic myopathy

43
Gowers sign
44
Distal weakness
  • Neuropathy
  • Distal myopathy

45
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46
Fluctuating weakness
  • NMJ lesion
  • Myasthenia gravis
  • Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome
  • Periodic paralysis
  • Metabolic abnormalities
  • Defect of glycogen metabolism
  • Defect of lipid metabolism
  • Defect of mitochondria metabolism

47
Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome
  • anti-voltage-gated calcium channel antibodies
  • Weakness of the shoulder and especially the hip
    girdle predominates
  • Sparing the bulbar, ocular, and respiratory
    muscles
  • Reflexes are typically reduced or absent at test.
    After a brief exercise, weakness and reflexes are
    often improved

48
Periodic paralysis
  • provoked by rest after exercise
  • totally paralyzed
  • sparing bulbofacial muscles and rarely
    respiratory muscles involvement

49
Defect of glycogen metabolism
  • Fatigue and muscle pain in the first few minute

50
Defect of lipid metabolism
  • Weakness after exercise 30-60 min

51
Defect of mitochondria metabolism
  • particular weakness of the extraocular
  • resting tachycardia
  • high lactic acid levels in the blood
  • excessive sweating

52
Acquired Disorders Causing Weakness
  • Motor neuron diseases
  • Inflammatory myopathy
  • Toxic myopathy
  • Endocrine disorders of muscle
  • Neuromuscular transmission disorders
  • Peripheral motor neuropathies

53
Motor neuron diseases
  • ALS
  • Kennedys disease

54
Inflammatory myopathy
  • Dermatomyositis
  • Polymyositis
  • Inclusion body myositis

55
Toxic myopathy
  • Alcohol
  • Other drugs steriods, statin, colchicine

56
Endocrine disorders of muscle
  • Thyriod myopathy

57
Neuromuscular transmission disorders
  • Myasthenia gravis
  • Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome

58
Peripheral motor neuropathies
  • Drug-induce dapsone, vincristine
  • AIDP
  • Multifocal motor neuropathy with conduction block

59
Lifelong nonprogressive disorders
  • Early childhood
  • Slender dysmorphic with diffuse weakness
  • Congenital muscular dystrophy
  • central core disease
  • nemaline myopathy
  • congenital fiber-type disproportion

60
Lifelong progressive disorders
  • Anterior horn cells - the spinal muscular
    atrophies
  • Peripheral motor nerve - Charcot-Marie-Tooth
    polyneuropathies
  • Muscle - muscular dystrophies

61
Disorders with Prominent Ocular Weakness
  • Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy
  • slowly progressive weakness of the eye muscles -
    ptosis and external ophthalmoplegia
  • difficulty in swallowing.
  • The Kearns-Sayre syndrome
  • Ptosis
  • extraocular muscle palsies
  • pigmentary degeneration of the retina
  • cerebellar ataxia
  • pyramidal tract signs
  • short stature
  • mental retardation
  • cardiac conduction defects

62
Disorders with Distinctive Facial or Bulbar
Weakness
  • FSH muscular dystrphy
  • Myotonic dystrophy type I

63
FSH muscular dystrphy
  • Early adult
  • Asymmetrical weakness
  • Weakness of the face ? difficulty with whistling
    or blowing up balloons
  • Weakness of the muscles around the shoulders is
    always seen, deltoid muscle spared

64
Myotonic dystrophy type I
  • Predominantly distal weakness
  • The neck flexors and temporal and masseter
    muscles are often wasted
  • The long, thin face with hollowed temples,
    ptosis, and frontal balding
  • Percussion myotonia and grip myotonia

65
Disorders with Distinctive Shoulder-Girdle or Arm
Weakness
  • Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy
  • Distal muscular dystrophies
  • myotonic dystrophy
  • Welander's myopathy

66
Disorders with Prominent Hip-Girdle or Leg
Weakness
  • SMA
  • Inherited muscular dystrophies
  • Duchenne's muscular dystrophy
  • Becker's muscular dystrophy
  • LGMD
  • Inflammatory myopathy
  • Distal myopathy
  • Markesbcry-Griggs Udd myopathy
  • Nonaka myopathy
  • Laing myopathy
  • Miyoshi myopathy
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