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Nervous System Emergencies

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Title: Nervous System Emergencies


1
Nervous System Emergencies
2
Nervous System A P
  • Nervous System Basics
  • The bodys control system
  • Exerts control through electrochemical impulses
    transmitted through nerves
  • Three subdivisions
  • Central nervous system (brain and spinal cord)
  • Peripheral nervous system (cranial, peripheral
    nerves)
  • Autonomic nervous system (sympathetic,
    parasympathetic)

3
Nervous System A P
  • A P of CNS (brain and spinal cord)
  • Neuron-nerve cell fundamental component of the
    nervous system
  • Cell body contains nucleus
  • Dendrites carry nervous impulses to cell body
  • Axons transmit nerve impulses away from cell body

4
Nervous System A P
  • A P of CNS (brain and spinal cord)
  • Transmission of impulses in the nervous system
  • At rest, neuron is positively charged outside,
    negatively charged inside
  • When stimulated, sodium enters cell, potassium
    rapidly leaves cell
  • Activity produces positive charge, called action
    potential, at entry site

5
Nervous System A P Overview
  • A P of CNS (brain and spinal cord)
  • Transmission of impulses in the nervous system
    (cont.)
  • Action potential transmitted down neuron to meet
    other neurons at junctions called synapses
  • Axon releases neurotransmitter (acetylcholine or
    norepinephrine) that transports impulses across
    synapse and stimulates connecting nerve

6
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Protective structures of the CNS
  • Mostly protected by body structures (skull,
    spinal column)
  • Also covered by membranes - meninges (pia,
    arachnoid, dura)
  • Brain and spinal cord also bathed in
    cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)

7
Nervous System A P Overview
  • The brain
  • Cerebrum
  • Diencephalon
  • Mesencephalon
  • Pons
  • Medulla Oblongata
  • Cerebellum

8
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Cerebrum
  • Two hemispheres joined by corpus callosum
  • Governs all sensory and motor functions
  • Responsible for language, learning, analysis,
    memory
  • Cerebral cortex is outermost layer

9
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Diencephalon
  • Superiormost portion of brain stem
  • Contains thalamus, hypothalamus, limbic system
  • Responsible for involuntary actions
  • Major role in regulating autonomic nervous system

10
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Mesencephalon
  • Midbrain-located between mesencephalon and pons
  • Responsible for motor coordination and eye
    movement

11
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Pons
  • Located between midbrain and medulla
  • Contains connections between the brain and spinal
    cord

12
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Medulla Oblongata
  • Located between pons and spinal cord
  • Marks division between brain and spinal cord
  • Controls respirations, cardiac function ,
    vasomotor activity

13
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Cerebellum
  • Located in posterior fossa of cranial cavity
  • Coordinates fine motor movement, posture,
    equilibrium, muscle tone

14
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Areas of Specialization
  • Speech-temporal lobe
  • Vision-occipital lobe
  • Personality-frontal lobes
  • Balance and coordination-cerebellum
  • Sensory-parietal lobes
  • Motor-frontal lobes

15
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Vascular supply to brain
  • Supplied by two systems carotid system and
    vertebrobasilar system
  • Both join at the circle of Willis before entering
    brain
  • Interruption of one system will not seriously
    affect brain perfusion
  • Venous drainage through venous sinuses and
    internal jugular veins

16
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Spinal Cord
  • 17-18 inches long
  • Leaves the brain through the foramen magnum
  • Conducts impulses to peripheral nervous system
  • Conducts sensory impulses to the brain and has
    reflex arc capability

17
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Spinal Cord (cont.)
  • Has 31 pairs of nerve fibers
  • Dorsal roots contain afferent fibers (body to
    brain)
  • Ventral roots contain efferent fibers (brain to
    body)
  • Nerve fibers innovate corresponding body areas
    called dermatones

18
Nervous System A P Overview
  • A P of the peripheral nervous system
  • Basic information
  • Consists of cranial and peripheral nerves
  • Has both voluntary and involuntary components

19
Nervous System A P Overview
  • A P of the peripheral nervous system
  • Categories of the peripheral nerves
  • Somatic motor-carry impulses to skeletal muscles
  • Visceral sensory-transmit sensations from
    visceral organs (e.g., full bladder need to
    defecate, etc.)
  • Somatic sensory-transmit sensations of touch,
    pressure, pain, temperature, position
  • Visceral motor-supply nerves to visceral glands
    and organs

20
Nervous System A P Overview
  • Autonomic nervous system
  • Responsible for unconscious control of body
    functions
  • Made up of two antagonistic, but normally
    balanced parts
  • Sympathetic nervous system controls stress
    response
  • Parasympathetic nervous system controls custodial
    (vegetative) functions

21
Assessment of the Neurological System
  • Primary Assessment
  • First check for responsiveness
  • Place emphasis on airway maintenance and cervical
    spine stabilization
  • With unconscious patients assume cervical spinal
    injury
  • Use modified jaw thrust maneuvers
  • Remain alert for possibility of respiratory arrest

22
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Secondary Assessment
  • History
  • Determine trauma vs medical etiology
  • If trauma
  • When did incident occur
  • Mechanism of injury
  • Any loss of consciousness
  • Chief complaint
  • Complicating factors

23
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Secondary Assessment (cont.)
  • History (cont.)
  • If nontrauma
  • Chief complaint
  • History of present illness
  • Pertinent underlying medical problems (cardiac
    disease, hypertension, diabetes, seizures)
  • Environmental clues (medications, Medic-alert ID,
    alcohol or drug bottles)

24
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Head to toe survey
  • Pupils
  • Check eye movement and pupil reaction
  • Early indicators of increasing ICP
  • Cardinal positions of gaze
  • Fixed, midsize pupils-midbrain
  • Pinpoint pupils, barely reactive-pons
  • Unilateral fixed and dilated pupil-third nerve
  • Fixed or asymmetric pupils-structural lesions
  • Nonreative pupils-toxic/metabolic states

25
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Head to toe survey (cont.)
  • Pupils (cont.)
  • Extraocular movements
  • Disconjugate gaze-structural brainstem lesion
  • Dolls eyes-brainstem dysfunction

26
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Head to toe survey (cont.)
  • Respiratory derangements common with CNS illness
    or injury
  • Cheyne Stokes respiration-period of apnea
    followed by increasing depth and frequency of
    respirations
  • Central neurogenic hyperventilation-rapid, deep,
    noisy respirations lesion in CNS
  • Ataxic respirations-ineffective thoracic muscular
    coordination due to CNS damage

27
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Head to toe survey (cont.)
  • Respiratory derangements common with CNS illness
    or injury (cont.)
  • Apneustic respirations-prolonged inspiration
    unrelieved by expiration attempts damage to
    upper pons
  • Diaphragmatic breathing-caused by intercostal
    muscle dysfunction

28
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Spinal Evaluation-document loss of motor function
    or sensation
  • Evaluate for pain and tenderness
  • Observe for bruises
  • Observe for deformity
  • Check for motor, sensory and position in each
    extremity and bilateral grip strength
  • Determine response to pain
  • Note any incontinence

29
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Vital signs that characterize CNS injury
  • Increased blood pressure
  • Decreased pulse
  • Decreased respirations
  • Increased temperature

30
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Neurological Evaluation - provides baseline
    neurological findings for later
    comparison/contrast
  • Determine level of consciousness
  • AVPU during primary survey
  • Note sensation and motor function in extremities
  • Asymmetry-structural lesions
  • Abnormal posturing
  • Flaccid paralysis-spinal cord injury

31
Assessment of the Nervous System
  • Glascow Coma Scale
  • Evaluates coma patient with CNS injury by
    monitoring
  • Eye openings
  • Verbal response
  • Motor response

32
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Altered mental status-hallmark of CNS illness or
    injury
  • Basic mechanisms that can produce altered mental
    status
  • Structural lesions
  • Toxic-metabolic states

33
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Common causes of altered mental status
  • Structural
  • Trauma
  • Brain tumor
  • Epilepsy
  • Intracranial hemorrhage
  • Other space-occupying lesions

34
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Common causes of altered mental status
  • Metabolic
  • Anoxia
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Diabetic ketoacidosis
  • Hepatic failure
  • Renal failure
  • Thiamine deficiency

35
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Common causes of altered mental status
  • Drugs
  • Barbiturates
  • Narcotics
  • Hallucinogens
  • Depressants

36
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Common causes of altered mental status
  • Cardiovascular
  • Hypertensive encephalopathy
  • Shock
  • Anaphylaxis
  • Dysrhythmias
  • Cardiac arrest
  • CVA

37
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Common causes of altered mental status
  • Respiratory
  • COPD
  • Toxic gas inhalation
  • Infectious
  • Encephalitis
  • Meningitis

38
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Primary Assessment
  • Special attention to the airway and c-spine
  • Consider AEIOU TIPS mnemonic
  • Early intubation

39
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Secondary Assessment
  • History
  • Length of alteration in mental status
  • Onset
  • History of recent head trauma
  • patient under medical care
  • Alcohol or drug use
  • Preceding symptoms or complaints
  • Any medications
  • Medic-Alert tags

40
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Secondary Assessment (cont.)
  • Physical exam-should include breathing, response
    to stimuli, eye response, pupil response, being
    particularly alert in suspected CNS illness or
    injury cases
  • Pupillary reflexes-fixed, dilated, or asymmetric
    pupils
  • Extraocular movements-dysconjugate gaze

41
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Secondary Assessment (cont.)
  • Physical exam-should include breathing, response
    to stimuli, eye response, pupil response, being
    particularly alert in suspected CNS illness or
    injury cases
  • Motor findings-asymmetry, decorticate or
    decebrate posturing, flaccid paralysis
  • Respiratory patterns
  • Vital signs-hypertension, bradycardia, unusual
    body temperature

42
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Management
  • Immobilization of the cervical spine
  • Assure patency and adequate breathing
  • Draw venous blood sample, check blood sugar with
    glucometer or chem strip
  • IV 5 D5W at TKO rate related NS or LR if trauma
  • Cardiac monitor

43
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Drug considerations
  • 50mL of 50 dextrose (25 grams) IV to correct
    hypoglycemia
  • Naloxone 1-2 mg IV to reverse narcotic overdose
  • Thiamine 100mg IV to correct thiamine deficiency
    and allow glucose metabolism
  • Mannitol 25g IV to reduce ICP
  • Decadron 4-24 mg IV to reduce cerebral edema

44
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Management with chronic alcoholism
  • Many have thiamine deficiency
  • Wernickes syndrome-memory loss, disorientation
  • Korsakoffs psychosis-disorientation,m muttering
    delirium, insomnia, delusions painful
    extremities, bilateral foot drop, pain on
    pressure over long nerves
  • These patients should receive 100 mg Thiamine IV
    or IM

45
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Management with ICP
  • Hyperventilate patient
  • Decadron 4-24 mg IV to reduce cerebral edema
  • Mannitol 25g IV to cause an osmotic diuresis

46
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures
  • Pathophysiology of seizures
  • Massive electrical discharge of one or more
    groups of neurons in the brain
  • Can be general or partial
  • Generalized seizures-grand mal and petit mal
  • Partial seizures-simple or complex (psychomotor)

47
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Causes of seizures
  • Stressors such as hypoxia, sudden elevation in
    temperature, or hypoglycemia in healthy persons
  • Structural diseases such as tumors, head trauma,
    eclampsia, vascular disorders
  • Idiopathic epilepsy is the most common cause

48
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Types of Seizures
  • Grand Mal-generalized motor seizure
  • Produces loss of consciousness from brain hypoxia
  • Causes uncontrollable tonic/clonic movements of
    extremities
  • Disrupts respirations, producing cyanosis
  • Often lead to frothing, incontinence, mental
    confusion
  • Coma or drowsiness follows (postical period)

49
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Grand-mal (progression)
  • Aura-subjective sensation preceding seizure
  • May be psychic (déjà vu)
  • May be sensory (a noise, sight, sound, odor)
  • Loss of consciousness
  • Tonic phase-continuous motor tension and
    contraction of muscles

50
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Grand-mal (progression cont.)
  • Hypertonic phase-extreme muscular rigidity,
    hyperextension of the back
  • Clonic phase-extreme muscular rigid

51
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Grand-mal (progression cont.)
  • Post-seizure coma
  • Postictal period-patient awakens confused,
    fatigued with some neurological deficits

52
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Focal motor seizures
  • Characterized by dysfunction of one area of the
    body
  • Caused by electrical discharge form one part of
    the brain
  • Begin as localized tonic/clonic movements can
    spread and appear s generalized

53
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Psychomotor (temporal lobe) seizures
  • Characterized by distinctive pre-seizure aura
  • Focal seizures lasting 1-2 minutes
  • Patient experiences loss of contact with
    surroundings
  • Patient may be confused, purposeless, or may show
    change in personality or rage abruptly

54
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Petit mal seizures
  • Generalized seizures with 10-30 second loss of
    consciousness
  • Patient may stare and flutter eyelids
  • Observers may be unaware of seizure

55
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Seizures (cont.)
  • Hysterical seizures
  • Psychological disorders
  • Patient presents with sharp and bizarre movements
  • Curt commands can curtail seizure
  • No postical period
  • Use of aromatic ammonia may differentiate
    hysterical from true seizure

56
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Assessment
  • rule out other causes of coma
  • Obtain history including
  • History of seizure
  • Alcohol/drug abuse
  • Current medications
  • Recent history of head trauma
  • Description of seizure
  • Past medical history (diabetes, cardiac, strokes)
  • Differentiate true seizure vs. syncope

57
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Management
  • Protect patient from self-harm do not restrain
  • Maintain airway
  • Administer oxygen
  • Establish IV access
  • Determine blood glucose D50W if needed
  • Protect body temperature
  • position patient on side after tonic/clonic phase

58
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Management (cont.)
  • Suction if required
  • Monitor cardiac rhythm
  • Provide quiet rest, reassuring atmosphere
  • Transport in supine or lateral recumbent position

59
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Status Epilepticus
  • Description
  • Series of two or more seizures without lucid
    period
  • Most common cause is failure to take
    anticonvulsant medications
  • Can lead to brain injury from anoxia

60
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Status Epilepticus (cont.)
  • Management
  • Establish and protect airway
  • Assist ventilations with 100 oxygen
  • Establish IV access with NS TKO
  • Monitor cardiac rhythm
  • Administer 50 dextrose 25gm IV
  • Administer diazepam 5-10 mg IV

61
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Stroke (cerebrovascular accident - CVA)
  • Pathophysiology
  • injury or death to brain tissue from interruption
    of blood
  • Can by caused by ischemic or hemorrhagic lesions
    commonly secondary to atherosclerosis or
    hypertension
  • Sudden loss of consciousness followed by
    paralysis which may be caused by hemorrhage,
    embolism or thrombus

62
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • Categories of stroke
  • Infarction
  • Inadequate blood supply to limited prtion of the
    brain
  • caused by embolism or blood vessel occlusion
    usually due to thrombus
  • Hemorrhage
  • Intracerebral or subarachnoid bleeding
  • Marked by sudden onset of headache and stiff neck
  • Can cause increased intracranial pressure

63
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • Clinical presentation of a stroke
  • Symptoms depend on area of brain injured
  • Motor, speech, and sensory centers most commonly
    affected
  • Onset of symptoms is acute and may include
  • Unconsciousness
  • Stertorous breathing
  • Unequal pupils
  • Unilateral paralysis
  • Speech disturbances

64
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • Distinguishing CVA from transient ischemic
    attacks (TIAs)
  • Temporary stroke symptoms
  • Usually caused by small emboli
  • Can last several minutes to hours
  • No evidence of neurological deficient after
    attack
  • Abrupt onset with symptoms depending on area of
    brain affected

65
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • Symptoms
  • Monocular blindness
  • Hemiplegia
  • Inability to recognize by touch
  • Staggering
  • Difficulty in swallowing, aphasia
  • Hemiparesis
  • Dizziness
  • Numbness, paresthesia

66
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • History - Determine
  • Previous neurological symptoms
  • Initial symptoms and their progression
  • Chanbes in mental status Precipitating factors
  • Dizziness
  • Palpitations
  • History of hypertension, cardiac disease, sickle
    cell disease, previous TIA or stroke

67
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • Physical Exam - Be alert for
  • Hemiparesis, hemiplegia
  • Unilateral facial droop
  • Speech disturbances
  • Gait problems
  • Altered mental status
  • Vision problems

68
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • Management of CVA and TIA
  • Maintain patient supine with 15 degree head
    elevation to maximize venous drainage
  • Maintain c-spine integrity if trauma suspected
  • Maintain a patent airway, assisting ventilation
    PRN
  • Administer oxygen, hyperventilation if patient
    unresponsive
  • Draw venous blood sample and test for blood sugar

69
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Strokes (cont.)
  • Management
  • Start IV with NS or LR TKO
  • Monitor cardiac rhythm
  • If patient hypoglycemic, give D50W
  • Protect paralyzed extremities
  • Reassure patient and transport quietly to hospital

70
Nervous System Emergencies
  • Judy Dyke, RN, NREMT-P
  • Rogers State University
  • Paramedic Technology Program
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