NEUROLOGICAL EXAMINATION A four minuet (or less) examination - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

NEUROLOGICAL EXAMINATION A four minuet (or less) examination

Description:

NEUROLOGICAL EXAMINATION A four minuet (or less) examination By Don Hudson, D.O., FACEP/ACOEP Organic Disease ? Signs &/or symptoms that cannot be faked must be ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:363
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: donaldhud
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: NEUROLOGICAL EXAMINATION A four minuet (or less) examination


1
NEUROLOGICAL EXAMINATIONA four minuet (or less)
examination
  • By
  • Don Hudson, D.O., FACEP/ACOEP

2
Organic Disease ?
  • Signs /or symptoms that cannot be faked must be
    examined closely.
  • Examples include, asymmetry in pupils, abnormal
    retinal exams, nystagmus, muscle atrophy, and
    muscle fasciculation.

3
Where are the Connections
  • Upper Motor Neurons (UMN) are defined as the
    connections of motor nerves before they leave the
    spinal cord
  • Lower Motor Neurons (LMN) are defined as after
    the synapse (connection) into the peripheral
    nerve cell bodies.

4
THE EXAMINATION
  • Heres what you need to examine.
  • Mental Status
  • Cranial Nerves
  • Motor
  • Sensory
  • Coordination
  • Reflexes

5
Mental Status Exam
  • FOGS
  • Family story of memory loss
  • Orientation
  • General Information
  • Spelling /or numbers
  • Recognition of objects

6
Cranial Nerves
  • Cranial nerve 1 (Olfactory)
  • The sense of smell rarely identifies any
    significant pathology.
  • Use tobacco, soap, smelling salts, etc for some
    idea to get some idea if they smell.
  • Ammonia stimulates pain endings of CN5 (
    Trigeminal) rather than CN1

7
Cranial Nerves
  • Cranial Nerve 2 (optic Nerve)
  • Central vision- Vision testing a chart, i.e.
    Snellen.
  • Peripheral Vision- Test one eye at a time

8
Examples of How to Examine
9
CRANIAL NERVES
  • Cranial Nerves 3, 4, 6
  • Key tests
  • Lateral and Vertical gaze
  • Pupillary reaction to light

10
Cranial Nerves
  • PERLA- means you checked the pupil constriction
    at near accommodation. This is rarely done.
    Therefore it should read PERL.
  • This tests the response of each pupil to light.

11
PUPILS
  • A large dilated pupil on one side with no other
    ocular abnormalities may be normal. (check
    license)
  • A dilated pupil in the presence of AMS suggests
    herniation of the temporal lobe against C3 the
    brain stem.
  • Constricted pupils may indicate pontine injuries,
    narcotics i.e. Demerol, Morphine.

12
Cranial Nerve 5 (Trigeminal)
  • A lesion that effects C5 will usually effect all
    three segments (ophthalmic,maxillary,mandibular)
    so the exam light touch on both cheeks.
  • If you suspect a orbital injury touching the
    cornea with a wisp of cotton will test the
    corneal reflex. This tests C5 transfer to the
    brain stem then on to C7

13
Crainal Nerve 7 (Facial Nerve)
  • This is a critical part of the neuro exam.
  • Smile- note any weakness on either side of the
    mouth
  • Bells Palsy- Where the nerve is injured between
    pons face there is total facial paralysis i.e.,
    weakness of a corner of the mouth closing the
    eye wrinkling the brow.
  • If the smile test is normal there is little
    reason to continue the exam.

14
Crainal Nerve 8
  • Vestibulocochlear Nerve- Conductive defects or
    sensorineural are found here.
  • Rubbing your fingers together next to the
    patients ear. Blocked EAC with wax are examples
    of conductive loss.
  • Ask the patient to hum- in the conductive loss
    the blocked ear sounds louder, in sensorineural
    loss the normal ear sounds louder.

15
Cranial Nerves 9 10
  • Glossopharyngeal Vagus
  • This is basically a gag reflex check

16
Crainal Nerve 11
  • Accessory Nerve
  • Key test Shoulder elevation (shrug)
  • Rarely injured except bin neck injuries.

17
Cranial Nerve 12
  • Hypoglossal Nerve
  • Key test- stick out your tongue
  • The tongue will deviate to the side of weakness.

18
Motor Examination
  • Key tests
  • Drift of upper lower extremity
  • Hand grip toe foot dorsiflexion
  • Testing of other muscles when their proper
    function is in question

19
Sensory Extremity Examination
  • Key Test
  • Pain Sensation- Use simultaneous stimulation
    (sharp, dull, etc.)
  • Proprioception- Test big toe (position).
  • MS, neurosyphilis, pernicious anemia may cause
    loss of lower extremity proprioception.

20
Coordination
  • Key Test
  • Finger to nose heel to shin motions
  • Alternating rapid movements of hand foot.
    Examples of tapping thumb index fingers
    together, or heel on floor tap toes on floor.
  • Balance test- Tandem gait or Romberg test.

21
Romberg Test
  • Key test
  • Be sure to check orthostatic (B/P) for changes
    first
  • Balance is maintained by vision, vestibular sense
    proprioception. These feed into the cerebellum
    either directly or indirectly. If a patient sways
    with eyes open or close it is considered .

22
Reflexes
  • Key tests
  • Triceps, biceps, knee jerk, Achilles Babinski
    are the major reflexes.
  • Asymmetry is usually a sign of major pathology.
  • Babinski- This points to a upper motor neuron
    lesion. A positive test is when the lateral
    aspect of the foot is scratched the big toe
    dorsiflexes the other toes fan out

23
Examination of Unconscious Pt.
  • Key test
  • Hand-drop over head
  • Pupillary size response to light
  • Abnormal eye movements
  • Grimacing, withdrawal to noxious stimuli
  • Babinski reflex
  • V/S, Cardiac, Respiratory metabolic status

24
Rapid Neuro Exam
  • Mental Status- FOGS, count back from 100, serial
    7s
  • Cranial Nerves- C1- smells tobacco 0r soap
    Visual acuity (near/far), gross visual fields,
    Opth. Exam CN3,4,6- Pupil light response
    lat/vertical gaze CN5- double stimulation
    corneal reflex. CN7- Smile CN8-finger tips
    rubbing hum CN9,10- gag CN11 shrug CN12-stick
    out tongue
  • Motor- drift of extremities, grasp foot/toe
    dorsiflexion
  • Sensory- double stimulation hands/feet position
    of big toe.
  • Coordination- finger to toe raid movements of
    fingers/toes Romberg, tandem gait
  • Reflexes- check Kergig or Brudzinski
  • U/C- V/S, hand-drop, abn. eye movements,
    withdrawal, Babinski, cornea's, dolls eye reflex.

25
Neuro Exam
  • This is a brief neurological examination. It is
    not meant to replace a full neurological
    examination.
  • This is intended to be part of the secondary exam
    for pre-hospital providers.
  • This exam should not take longer than 3-4 minutes.

26
How to get good doing the Exam
  • PRACTICE
  • PRACTICE
  • PRACTICE
  • Thanks for your patience, Don Hudson, D.O.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com