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Neurology Board Review Nick Genes October 8, 2008 the inservice exam • • • • Feb 25, 2009 Short term $$$ (moonlighting, Mets) Long term $$$$$$ (licensure, career in EM) But also: intro to EM practice • Similar questions to ABEM • Last year: 207 questions counted • Physician’s Evaluation and Educational Review VII • Las Vegas Board Review Course MP3s (2003?) This lecture series • Board review: Five months, 20 lectures… • Different than Dr. Cherkas sessions • • • • • This year: More engagement than 2005-6 More questions, buzzwords than last year More repetition More candy Neurology • 21 questions in PEER VII (out of 410, 5%) • Some overlap in HEENT, S&S • Last year’s inservice: it was 11 out of 207 • CV, GI, Pulm, Trauma each ~20 • Likely emphasis: details that make or break ED diagnosis or management Neurology • Today: Stroke, Other Stuff, Seizures • No evidence, no nuance. Question 1 A 74 year old female with history of DM, HTN, presents with 2 hours onset right face, arm > leg weakness with an associated right hemisensory deficit. No left sided deficits. No cranial nerve deficits. What is the most likely diagnosis? a) Basilar Artery Occlusion Locked-In Syndrome – severe quadriplegia… only upward gaze intact! b) Subarachnoid Hemorrhage Where’s the headache? Nausea? Vomiting? c) Lacunar Infarction Pure motor or sensory deficit, caused by chronic HTN d) Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion Most common stroke syndrome… face + arms > legs. Aphasia in dom. hem. e) Posterior Cerebral Artery Occlusion where’s the diplopia? PCA stroke is primarily visual Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion • Lateral parietal, temporal, and frontal lobes • Contralateral Motor/ and Sensory Face and Arm > leg • Ipsilateral Hemianopsia • Aphasia/ Dysarthria (left sided stroke) • Agnosia / Neglect, extinction of double stimulus (right parietal lobe)- timing! CT Finding with MCA Occlusion • • • • Hyperdense MCA sign Loss of cortical ribbon Sulcal Effacement Obscuration of the grey/white junction Question 2 A 70 year old male presents to the ER with weakness in the leg upon waking this morning. His exam shows left leg 2/5 strength with ataxia of limb, 4/5 left arm strength, no facial droop. He keeps asking what time it is. Where is his lesion? a) Middle Cerebral Artery No – face and arms > legs b) Anterior Cerebral Artery Frontal, medial parietal and temporal lobes, legs > face, amnesia, confusion c) Posterior Cerebral Artery Primarily visual, with homonymous hemianopia, also amnesia, tremor d) Basilar Artery Locked-in state e) Carotid Artery He’d have bigger problems… Anterior Cerebral Artery Stroke • Affects medial parietal, temporal, and frontal lobes • Contralateral Motor and Sensory Leg > face and arm • Dis-inhibition, perseveration, primitive reflexes Basilar Artery Stroke • Bilateral sx • Coma • Locked in syndrome Posterior Cerebral Artery Stroke • A variety of presentations involving amnesia, LOC, perserveration, tremor, hallucinations. Primarily visual • Lesion on the right, past optic chiasm can’t see images on the contralateral side of either eye Cerebellar Infarct • • • • • Sudden inability to walk or stand (drop attack) Dizziness, nystagmus, ataxia 1/3 will develop significant edema Early neurosurg consultation Rapid deterioation with hemorrhage, infarct edema, watch for respiratory arrest Question 2 A 72 year old man presents with acute onset vertigo, nystagmus, dysphagia, and Horner’s syndrome. The most likely diagnosis is? a) Acute Labryinthitis Acute vertigo, sure… but not going to cause Horner’s, dysphagia b) Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo Vertigo… but not going to cause Horner’s, or dysphagia c) Lateral Medullary Infarction what does this look like? well… does it matter? d) Ophthalmoplegic Migraine Could cause CN III palsy, but not going to cause Horner’s Lateral Medullary Infarction AKA Wallenberg Syndrome Affects multiple areas: Trigeminal nucleus Descending sympathetics Lateral Spinothalamic Vestibular nuclei Ipsilateral face • Pain and Temperature (5) • Dysphagia • Dysarthria • Nystagmus (VN) • +/- limb ataxia Contralateral Limbs • Pain and Temperature (LS) Posterior Circulation Strokes • • • • • • • • • • The 6 D’s of Brainstem Dysphagia Dysarthria Diplopia Dystaxia Dizziness Drop attack (syncope) Ipsilateral Face Contralateral Extremity Visual Field Deficits Horner’s Syndrome • • • • Miosis (constriction), ptosis, anhidrosis on affected side Sympathetic fibers run upwards via cervical spine ganglia Innervate pupillary dilators (dilation lag) and lids, sweat glands Seen in migraine, brainstem CVA, Pancoast tumor, brachial plexus trauma, Lung lesion (TB, HMX), neuronal lesion Vertigo Peripheral -Sudden -Tinnitus, Auditory -Severe n/v/dizzy -Horizontal Nystagmus -May be positional, recent infections Central -Insidious -No peripheral sx -Less severe n/v/dizzy -Vertical or Horizontal Nystagmus -Not positional, may have peripheral neuro deficits Question 3 • A 43 year old female presents to the ER with her husband. Her husband states that his wife has been having the worst headache of her life and is “a bit off”. On exam she uncomfortable and confused without focal motor or sensory deficits. • A CT scan is obtained. Question 3 What is the most common etiology for the diagnosis revealed by the CT scan? a) AVM It’s a possibility b) Cavernous Angioma It’s a possibility c) Mycotic Aneurysm It’s a rare possibility d) Neoplasm More likely to cause hematoma, edema e) Saccular Aneurysm “Berry” -- cause of 80% of non-traumatic SAH. 5% of us have these Subarachnoid Hemorrhage • • • • • • Collection of blood in subarachnoid space Most likely causes are trauma, ruptured aneurysm, AVM What makes a berry rupture? Age, HTN, smoking, drinking, coke Mostly in age 40-60 2-4% Patient visits for HA 2-4% will have SAH; 12 % of pts with worst headache of life will have SAH, increases to 25% if abnormal neurologic exam • Headache 100%, Nausea and emesis 77%, focal deficits 64%, syncope 53%, neck pain 33%, photophobia, seizures in 25% of patients • 20-50% have prior warning headache “sentinel bleed” days prior Subarachnoid hemorrhage • Hunt & Hess I-V grades severity, partially predicts rebleed, death • Grade I has normal neuro exam, does very well (1/3) • Grade V presents in stupor or coma and always dies • CT – 93% sensitive, drops with time • LP – xanthochromia • Treatment – nimodipine, neurosurgical consult, aggressive BP control Question 4 Which of the following pretreatment patient characteristics has been associated with an increased risk of intracerebral hemorrhage following treatment with TPA for acute ischemic stroke? a) Advanced Age Not an independent risk factor for ICH b) Increased NIHSS In NINDS, one of 2 independent risk factors for ICH (with “infarct signs”) c) Isolated global aphasia No – by itself, low NIHSS score but should be considered for tPA d) Major surgery within 14 days No increased risk of ICH, but tPA means increased risk from noncomp sites e) Rapid improvement of neurological signs No – don’t give them tPA because (regular) risk of ICH outweighs benefits Tissue plasminogen activator for acute ischemic stroke. The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke rtPA Stroke Study Group. NEJM. 1995 333:1581-1587. • Double-blind, randomized, placebo controlled • Pts tx with rTPA are 30% more likely to have minimal to no disability at 3 months compared to standard care • Increase risk of symptomatic ICH (6.4%) with increasing NIHSS • American Heart Association, American Academy of Neurology, ACEP (if system in place) Inclusion Criteria Age > 18 Diagnosis of stroke with measurable deficit Time of onset < 3 hours before treatment will begin Relative Contraindications Major surgery or serious trauma within 2 weeks Only minor or rapidly improving stroke sx History of GI or GU hemorrhage within 21 days Recent arterial puncture as noncompressable site Glucose >400 or less than 50 Post MI pericarditis Patient with observed seizure at time of stroke onset Recent Lumbar Puncture tPA Exclusion Criteria Evidence of ICH on CT History of ICH or AVM Suspected SAH with normal CT Active internal bleeding Platelets < 100,000 Heparin within 48 hours with an elevated PTT Current use of oral anticoagulant with PT> 15sec SBP > 185 or DBP >110 at time treatment is to begin Within 3 months any intracranial surgery, serious head injury, or previous stroke (not TIA) Question 5 Which of the following statements best describes the role of neuroimaging in a patient presenting with acute stroke symptoms? a) CT and MRI are equivalent for detecting hemorrhagic transformation of an acute ischemic stroke MRI is superior at catching this. b) CT is superior to MRI for detecting chronic hemorrhage MRI sees more small hemorrhages that CT misses, but determining age is tricky c) MRI and noncontrast CT are equivalent for identifying acute hem. Within 6 hours, yes, they’re just as good. Shouldn’t really impact our practice. d) MRI is superior to noncontrast CT for detecting acute hemorrhage Not superior. Equal. e) Unenhanced CT remains superior to MRI for detecting acute hem. Not superior. Equal. Question 6 A 47yoM with a history of DM2 and HTN presents with disorientation and repetitive questioning. He is amnestic to the events of the day and cannot provide details of his presentation. His long-term memory is preserved. His wife reports a sudden onset of symptoms this morning. He’s had no recent illness, med changes, travel, or drug use. FSBS is 115 mg/dL. No focal neurological deficits are seen, and he is alert and cooperative. The most likely diagnosis is: a) Complex partial seizure Um… he’s alert and not shaking b) Delirium Hallmark is inattention, fluctuating course, disorganization c) Psychogenic amnesia Subgroup of “dissociative disorders” seen under stress, forget personal info d) Transient global amnesia No new memories for a day! TIA? complex migraine? +/- headache, anxiety. e) Transient ischemic attack Possibly, but usually motor or sensory deficits. Unlike TGA, TIA can progress to stroke Question 7 An 84 year old man with h/o HTN, DM, Afib on coumadin presents with left sided hemiparesis and left sided hemisensory changes with left sided neglect. He has a GCS of 15. Thirty minutes into his assessment his GCS falls to 11 with profound confusion. What is the most likely cause? a) Anterior Cerebral Artery Embolism Sudden, maximal at onset. You’d expect leg weakness b) Internal Capsule Intracerebral Hemorrhage Often HTN etiology, evolves from ischemic stroke, does not improve. c) Posterior Cerebral Artery Rupture Well, sure, there’s a change in consciousness… Would be comatose. d) Posterior Cerebral Artery Thrombosis Would cause fluctuating course, visual defects, ?hallucinations e) Vertebral Artery Occlusion Maybe a Wallenberg syndrome or medial medullary syndrome ICH • Basal Ganglia 40-50% • Lobar: 20-50% (esp young, increased sz activity) • Thalamus 10-15% • Pons 5-12% • Cerebellar 5-10% • Brain Stem 1-5% • Volume= (a+b+c)/2 ICH GCS 3-4 5-12 ________ ___13-15 ICH Vol >30 __________ _<30 IVH Yes __________ _No Infratentoral Yes __________ _No Age >80 __________ _<80 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0-6 Intracranial Hemorrhage • • • • 8-13% of all strokes Only 20% of pts regain full functional independence Increase incidence: AA, Asian, age >55, EtoH, Smokers Trauma, HTN, altered homeostasis, hemorrhagic necrosis, venous outflow obstruction • Causes brain injury via: 1. Increased Intracranial Pressure 2. Increase edema, mass effect 3. Decrease perfusion to local and adjacent tissue 4. 35% ICH will expand sig (>33%) within 24 hours; majority within 6 hours • Hemorrhagic transformation may occur during an apparent ischemic stroke • Think of it with sudden change in consciousness • Reversal of anticoagulation Question 8 A 22 year old female presents with double vision. The symptoms disappear with either eye is covered. Extraocular movements are intact when tested individually. On conjugate gaze testing there is nystagmus in the left eye and limited adduction in the right eye. What is the most likely cause? a) Dislocated Lens This is a cause of monocular diplopia b) Tertiary neurosyphilis Restrictive gaze, vision loss. Unlikely by age 22… c) Internuclear Opthalmoplegia Lesion of the MLF, which processes conjugate eye movements from cortex to VI and III. Eyes move normally when tested separately because primary pathway intact. Often MS. d) Retro-orbital hematoma Another binocular diplopia, pressing on EOM, but same apart or conjugate. e) Third Nerve palsy Down-and-out. Another binocular diplopia, but same apart or conjugate. Internuclear Opthalmoplegia • Occurs due to disruption in the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) • Coordinates conjugate eye movements • Most commonly due to MS • MS occurs in young women; deficits vary anatomically and temporally Diplopia Monocular • Refractive error • Dislocated lenses • Iridodialysis • Malingering Binocular • CN palsies • Brain lesions • HTN crisis • Cocaine • Wernicke’s • SLE • Retro-orbital mass/hematoma Question 9 A 45 year old male presents with nausea, emesis, and diarrhea. He is given 2 liters of IVF and 12.5mg of promethazine. 15 minutes later he is anxious and wants to leave the ED immediately. What is the diagnosis and management? a) Anxiety – discharge with psych f/u Dismissing medical complaints is almost never the answer b) Gastroenteritis – if tolerating PO, D/C No, something’s changed… c) Delirium – give haldol and call psych. Hallmark of delirium is inattention, not anxiety… d) Med reaction -- give him Prochlorperazine No! Causes akathesia in 44% of ED N/V patients within 1h e) Med reaction – give him Benztropine This is akathesia Akathesia • Acute dystonic reaction marked by anxiety, restlessness • Other dystonic rxns include torticollis • Associated with high potency antipsychotic (haldol), and any dopaminergic medications (promethazine, metoclopramide, prochlorperazine) • Treatment includes anti-cholinergic medications such as diphenhydramine and benztropine (not to use in kids less than 3) – they restore the balance of dopamineACh receptors. Question 10 A 48 year old disabled physician presents with severe low back pain, screaming obscenities. After administering hydromorphone 8 mg IV, he is more cooperative but still rude. Vitals are BP 190/105, HR 110, RR 22, Temp 101.3F, O2 Sat 99% RA. Exam reveals a disheveled man without signs of trauma, with a normal exam except for midline lumbar tenderness. No focal neuro deficits. UA, CBC, Chem 7 are normal. Plain lumbar films show moderate DJD. Question 10 Angry disabled physician with lumbar tenderness, HTN, tachycardic, febrile, screaming for opioids. The most appropriate next step in management is: a) Admit for pain control Fever must be worked up b) CT scan Can’t visualize spinal canal, cord, or discs as well as MRI. c) Discharge to pain clinic Much of his presentation suggests drug-seeking, but… d) MRI Fever + back pain suggests epidural abscess or vertebral osteo. e) Consult psychiatry Much of his presentation suggests drug-seeking, but… Back Pain Red Flags • Progressive neurological findings • Constitutional symptoms (fever) • History of traumatic onset • History of malignancy • Age under 18 years or over 50 years • • • • • IVDU Chronic steroids HIV Osteoporosis Pain > 6 weeks *American college of radiology “Red Flags” Cauda Equina Syndrome • Ca, Infiltrative, Sarcoidosis, Trauma, Infectious, Ank Spon • Pain, radicular • Weakness- variable • Saddle sensory changes • Overflow incontinance urine/stool • Neurosurgical consultation • Steroids + /- Other causes Sciatica • Radicular Pain • Lateral or post leg to foot • Straight leg raise (10-60), crossed • Numbness, no weakness • NSAIDS Epidural Abcess • Staph (MRSA) 63%; Gram Neg, Strep, Anaerobes, TB (potts) • Multiple levels • Epidurals, Surgical, IVDU, Cryptogenic • DM, ETOH, HIV • Pain, Fever, Weakness • MRI/ CT w/ gadolinium • Surgical Decompression /Aspitation • Abx: Nafcillin (Vanc)+Flagyl+ Ceftazidime or Cefotaxime Question 11 A 32 year old man who lives in New England presents complaining of bilateral leg weakness. His symptoms began with paresthesias in his toes followed by progressive weakness in both legs. Cranial nerve exam is normal. Motor strength is 3/5 in both legs, 4/5 both arms and sensation to light touch is mildly decreased in both legs. DTR’s are absent in both legs and +1 in b/l arms. What is the most likely diagnosis? a) Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis Involves UMN and LMN weakness, fasciculations, dysarthria, hyperreflexia b) Familial periodic paralysis Channelopathy that can lead to severe symmetric extremity weakness. c) Guillain-Barre Syndrome Classic presentation of ascending muscle weakness and loss of DTR. +/- sensory. d) Myasthenia gravis AB against ACh receptor in NMJ. No sensory component. e) Tick paralysis Can mimic GBS but is mediated by neurotoxin, never has sensory component Guillain-Barre Syndrome • Immune-mediated; motor, sensory, and autonomic dysfunction • GBS the most common cause of acute flaccid paralysis in the United States • Pure motor and motor + sensory subtypes. • 40-80% seropositive for Campylobacter jejuni • Haemophilus influenzae, Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and Borrelia burgdorferi. CMV, EBV, HIV • 85% of pts with normal recovery 6-18 months Guillain-Barre Syndrome • Ascending weakness from proximal thighs to trunk and upper extremities • Cranial nerves, respiratory muscles (1/3rd) • Paraesthesias distal to proximal, Proprioception, sensory • Autonomic dysfunction; HR, BP, Temp, Fecal and urinary retention Guillain-Barre Syndrome • Clinical diagnosis supported by: • Elevated or rising protein levels on serial lumbar punctures (90% pts) 1-2 weeks • CSF pleocytosis in HIV associated • Cauda Equina nerve roots enhance in 85% • ABG and FVC to assess respiratory function, intubate for ventilatory failure • IVIG and plasma exchange tx (plasmapheresis) MG and LE Myasthenia gravis -Autoantibodies against post-synaptic Ach receptors -Bulbar sx initially- ptosis, diplopia, dysphagia, 1% resp -Descending weakness -Thymoma 10-15% -Sx improve with rest Lambart-Eaton Syndrome -Autoantibodies against voltage gated calcium channels in pre-synaptic motor nerve terminal -Proximal lower extremity weakness (up from chair), months -Less common bulbar findings -Highly associated with cancer (50-70%) -Sx improve with movement Other Paralytic Disorders Familial periodic paralysis -Chanelopathy resulting in inexcitability of Na/Ca channels leading to periodic flacid paralysis -Hyperkalemic and Hypokalemic subtypes -Worsened by heat, stress, high carbohydrate meals -Treatment: Give K (or take it away). Tick paralysis -Caused by neurotoxin from salivary gland -Ascending paralysis 1-2 weeks -Rock Mountain wood tick (Dermacentor andersonii) and American dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis) … not Idoxes (Lyme) -Treatment: Remove tick. Wait patiently. Question 12 A 43 year old male presents to the emergency room with 2 hours onset decreased movement of right side of face, ear pain, and thinks he might have had spoiled milk with his cereal this am because it tasted funny. What is the least important question for the diagnosis? a) When was the milk’s expiration date? Come on (although botulism is associated with honey in infants) b) Can he move his forehead? Distinguishes stroke from Bell’s Palsy (stroke = forehead spared) c) Does he have a history of migraine? Attempting to pin this on complex migraine d) Does he have clustered vesicles about the ear? looking for Ramsay-Hunt variant of Bell’s Palsy e) Does he have peripheral motor weakness? Distinguishes stroke from Bell’s Palsy Bell’s Palsy • Facial Nerve CN 7 palsy • Upper and lower facial weakness • Post auricular pain • Hyperacusis (stapedius) • Hypoageusia (ant 2/3 tongue) • Decreased lacrimation • Recovery: 30% pts w/ Crocodile tears, dysagusia, partial paralysis; 80-90% without sig deficit Bell’s Palsy • GEORGE CLOONEY has revealed he suffered from paralysing Bell's Palsy when he was a teenager. he muscle-weakening disorder left him with a temporary disfigured face, but Clooney has always had the perfect response for people who poke fun at his odd high school photos. He says, "People bring it up and they go, 'Look how goofy you looked,' and I go, 'I had Bell's Palsy; you feel bad now.'" And in a new interview with U.S. TV news show The Insider, the greyhaired movie hunk offered another big surprise from his past: "I was a blond." Bell’s Palsy Causes HSV 1,2 VZV Mycoplasma pneumoniae Borrelia burgdorferie HIV (b/l) Adenovirus coxsackievirus Ebstein-Barr virus Hepatitis A, B, and C Cytomegalovirus Treatment Prednisone 60mg/day X 10 days ?Acyclovir 800mg 5X/day for 7 days ?Valacylovir 1000mg TID for 7 days Artificial Tears Ramsey-Hunt Syndrome • Herpes Zoster Oticus; HSV1, HSV2, VZV • Triad of auricular pustules, ear pain, ipsilateral facial paralysis • +/- Hypoaguesia and hyperacusis • Worse prognosis Bell’s Palsy- Treating Ourselves? • Cochrane Database 2004- trials of antivirals with or without steroids -- insufficient evidence for support of antivirals • Valcyclovir and prednisolone treatment for Bell's palsy: a multicenter, RCT Otol Neurotol. 2007 Apr;28(3):408-13. N=221; 6-8% improvement in severity and complete remission • “low-cost steroids can yield a 9% absolute reduction in risk for residual paralysis.” 1 mg/kg of prednisone or prednisolone daily in two divided doses for 10 days. • If steroids are contraindicated, the spontaneous recovery rate of 85% by 9 months is reassuring to both doctor and patient. Question 13 A 25 year old male presents with 1 day of severe right sided head and neck pain with blurred vision. He states he went to his chiropractor in the morning before symptom onset. On exam he has right sided miosis and ptosis with normal motor function and sensory function. What is his most likely diagnosis? a) Right brainstem CVA Pain less likely, Horner’s fits but no other lesions? b) Cluster Headache Time course is wrong, pain behind eyes for minutes a day, O2 therapy c) Bell’s Palsy Pain doesn’t fit d) Tick Bite Not even a diagnosis… Not Lyme, not Tick Paralysis, not RMSF… e) Carotid artery dissection Unilateral facial / neck / orbital pain, usually after manipulation Carotid Artery Dissection • Unilateral facial/neck/orbital pain • Hypoageusia • Transient blindness, amaurosis fugax • 50% w/ partial Horners syndrome • 25% pulsitle tinnitus • Neck swelling, bruise • May progress to CVA with dense hemiparesis • • • • • • • Trauma Chiropractic manipulation Sports, yoga CTD HTN Smoking Oral contraceptives Diagnosis and Treatment • Angiography gold • Anticoagulation with standard heparin to prevent thromboembolic • MRA optimal if available complications • CT angiogram evolving, • If can’t, consider ASA esp for trauma pts • Neurosurgical consultation Question 14 Clinical features of delirium include: a) Apraxia A decreased ability to carry out motor activities? More likely in dementia b) Auditory hallucinations Usually visual c) Disordered attention The hallmark of delirum. Unlike dementia! Worth investigating and reversing. d) Insidious onset Delirium is abrupt, involve fluctuations over the day. Dementia is stable. e) Sustained delusions Usually poorly organized, rarely sustained. Dementia has fixed, false beliefs. Question 15 Pharmacologic causes of parkinsonism include: a) Barbiturates Sedative-hypnotic with no extrapyramidal effects b) Benztropine Cogentin – actually helps parkinsonism (anticholinergic for dystonia) c) Bromocriptine Actually helps parkinsonism (dopamine agonist) d) Bupropion This is Wellbutrin/Zyban. Overdose is associated with seizures. e) Butyrophenones Haldol, Droperidol antagonize dopamine, disinhibit cholinergic response. Parkinsonism • • • • • • 80% idiopathic (called Parkinson’s disease) Other causes: drugs, trauma, malignancy, degen Insiduous onset Motor deficiencies are assymetric Cogwheel rigidity on passive ranging, shuffling gait Falls Question 16 Which of the following statements regarding idiopathic intracranial hypertension is correct? a) A head CT will show markedly enlarged ventricles Ventricles are actually small, cisterna magna is large. b) Acetazolamide is an accepted medical treatment Reduces CSF production c) LP is contraindicated LP is diagnostic and therapeutic (pressures > 20 cm H20, the rest is WNL). d) Requires prompt neurosurgery to prevent herniation Delirium is abrupt, involve flucuations over the day. Dementia is stable. e) Severe weight loss is a prominent part of the HPI ??? Obesity is associated with pseudotumor Pseudotumor Cerebri (Benign Intracranial Hypertension) • • • • • • • • • Young obese female, irregular menses At risk: high vit A or chronic steroids Impaired CSF absorption Elevated CSF pressure without mass or obstruction Serious outcome – visual loss Visual complaints, headache, no focal signs CT – slit like ventricles, no mass effect LP- high pressures Treatment – repeat LP, steroids, acetazolamide Acetazolamide • Not something commonly given in the ED • It comes up in (at least) three places on the inservice: – – – – Acute Mountain Sickness (only FDA approved agent!) Pseudotumor Glaucoma (but don’t give it if they’re sicklers) No lit to support in HACE (give steroids, O2, descend) • Carbonic anhydrase inhibitor • Makes you piss away bicarb metabolic acidosis increased ventilation, oxygenation • Also decreases CSF volume, relieves ICP, IOP • Makes soda taste funny Question 17 A pediatrician calls AMAC with a greet: “PRIVATE PATIENT EN ROUTE BY CAR. MOTHER SAYS CHILD (MALE) IS JERKING, FEELS HOT. NO PMHX, NO MEDS. SUSPECT SIMPLE FEBRILE SEIZURE.” Assuming that the PMD is right, which of the following most likely describes this patient and his ED encounter? a) 2 weeks old, afebrile, well-appearing, had a generalized seizure that lasted 10 minutes Too young (must be 6 months – 5 years) b) 4 months old, febrile, had a generalized seizure at home that lasted 10 minutes, UTI diagnosed in ED Too young. Would need LP. Also at this age, more likely to recur. c) 19 months old, febrile, well-appearing, had a generalized seizure at home that lasted 10 minutes Right age, right seizure. No chance of occult meningitis. LP? d) 23 months old, well-appearing, had 2 gen. seizures 5 min each Simple Febrile Seizures can only occur once per 24 hours. LP him! e) 9 years old, febrile, generalized seizing on arrival, had one hand twitching at home x10 minutes. Too old! Must be under five years. Also, this is a complex partial seizure. CT,LP. Question 18 A 44yoM presents following a witnessed seizure that lasted 2 minutes. He has no history of a seizure disorder, and has otherwise been in his usual state of health. Thirty minutes later he has another seizure that begins in the right arm and progresses to 1 minute of jerking of the extremities followed by a post-ictal confusion. This event is most accurately classified as: a) Absence seizure Um… he’s shaking (absence seen in kids 4-12, sometimes with fine facial tics) b) Complex partial seizure Most accurate classification … simple partial with secondary generalization c) Grand mal seizure No abrupt onset – this was a progression from a focus d) Psychomotor seizure Bad catch-all term that encompasses complex partial seizures e) Temporal lobe seizure Often preceded by aura, complex partial… involves behavioral changes, hallucinations Nonconvulsive (absence) Seizure types Generalized No inciting focus Begin in both hemispheres Abrupt LOC Often, no aura Convulsive Tonic clonic (Grand Mal) Clonic only, tonic only, atonic, myoclonic Partial (focused) Simple: No LOC or AMS Simple: Motor, sensory, autonomic Complex: Altered Consciousness New onset seizures in adults are most often these simple seizures with secondary generalization… due to a focal finding on CT or MRI Question 19 38 y/o female with a history of epilepsy presents with multiple seizures without return to consciousness for 30 minutes. Her finger stick is 100 and her blood ICON is (-). She has been given 4 mg of ativan x2 but continues to seize. What is your next step? a) 4 mg midazolam A short-acting benzo is not “the next step” b) 8 mg lorazepam We’ve already tried 8 mg of ativan… c) Vitamin B6 No reason to suspect INH toxicity d) Fosphenytoin load This is the appropriate second-line agent for status epilepticus e) Succinylcholine and etomidate with ETT What, and take away our neuro exam? Status Epilepticus • Status Epilepticus • 30 minutes of seizure activity without return of consciousness • If seizure >4-5 minutes consider status; neuronal injury- must wake up! • If considering Non-convulsive SE, get EEG! • Treatment of SE based on universal guidelines and institutional protocol • Treatment and investigation parallel Status Epilepticus • 1/3rd new onset • 1/3rd epilepsy • 1/3rd: • • • • • • • • • Idiopathic Hyper/hyponattremia Hypercalcemia Hypoglycemia CVA Trauma Infectious Mass HE Toxins • INH • Tricyclics (AVR, QRS) • Theophylline • Cocaine • Sympathomimetics • Alcohol withdrawal • Organophosphates (strychnine) • DM medications (glucose) Status Epilepticus 1st Line: Ativan 4 mg over 2 minutes q5 min X2 • If no access 20mg diazepam pr, 10mg midazolam IM • 2nd Line: IV Fosphenytoin (20mg/kg at 150mg/min; may add 10mg/kg) • May give IV Keppra, Valproic Acid, Phenobarbitol if pt is on it • 3rd Line: Pentobarbitol, Intubation with continuous drip of midazolam or propofol • Other: Vitamin B6 (70mg/kg up to 5 ) THE END Bonus slides Question 12 A 35 year old female 1 week post-partum presents with 1 day of severe headache, nausea and vomiting. She is slightly confused and lethargic. She is afebrile, normo-tensive, with a negative UA. Given the clinical picture, what is the treatment of choice? a) PCC or FFP no b) Emergent Craniotomy no c) Serial lumbar punctures no d) Magnesium Sulfate IV no e) Heparin yes Venous Sinus Thrombosis • Headache, nausea, emesis, ams, focal deficits; pesudotumor cerebri • Women, peripartum, hypercoaguable states, systemic inflammatory conditions • CT head, MRV • Atypical ischemic or hemorrhagic region • Tx: Heparin Question 5 A 23 year old patient presents is BIBEMS being bagged with a GCS of 3. His friend is with him and states that while doing “a lot” of cocaine his friend developed severe headache with sudden loss of conciousness. Which of the following considerations in further management is incorrect? a) Pretreat with lidocaine and consider fentanyl and vecuronium This is fine (especially with the “consider”) b) Do not allow single episode of hypoxia or hypotension This is very important c) Hyperventilate to pC02 25-30 mmHg No! d) Raise head of bed to 30 degrees This is fine e) Consider mannitol or hypertonic saline for deterioration in neurologic status This is fine (note: “consider”) Maintain pCO2 between 35-40, not any lower! Pretreatment • Oxygen NRB • Lidocaine 1.5mg/kg 3 minutes before • Fentayl 2ug/kg • Vecuronium .01mg/kg (Defasciculating Dose) • Intubation by most experienced MD; single episode of hypoxia associated with poor outcome Ventilation *Short term hyper-ventilation for neurologic deterioration *Maintain pCO2 35-40 *Long term hyper-ventilation not Rx Management of elevated ICP • • • • CPP=MAP-ICP Maintain cerebral perfusion Do not lower BP by > 20% General rule is to maintain systolic between 160-180 • A single hypotensive episode is assoicated with worse outcomes • Tx hypotension with IVF • Treatment of Increased ICP includes: -Mannitol -Raise Head of bed 30 D -Hypertonic Saline (future) -Hyperventilation -Surgical evacuation • Orphan Slide • Cranial Nerve 6 (abducens) palsy; lateral rectus; ACOM • Cranial Nerve 3 (occulomotor) palsy; ptosis, medial, superior, inferior gaze, pupillary constrictors; PCOM • Subhyaloid Hemorrhage