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Neurological Problems
Localized/Limited Nerve Disorders
- Bell’s palsy
- Trigeminal neuralgia
- Herpes zoster (shingles)
- Temporal arteritis
- Central Disorders
- Headache
- Brain tumor
- Meningitis
- Dizziness
- TIA/CVA
- Epilepsy/Seizure disorder
- Transient Global Amnesia
- Gait/Movement Disorders
- Gait disorders
- Normal pressure hydrocephalus
- Benign Essential (Familial) Tremors
- Parkinson’s disease
- Multiple sclerosis
- Peripheral Disorders
- Neuropathic pain
- Peripheral neuropathy
- Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
- Guillain-Barre syndrome
- Restless leg syndrome
- Muscle Weakness
Neurological Problems
- Localized/Limited Nerve Disorders
1.Bell’s Palsy:
Description
Paralysis of CN VII
Most common cause of facial paralysis
Increased incidence in ages 30-40 and >70
- Etiology: although usually idiopathic, HSV type 1 may play a role
Risk factors; DM, hypothyroidisms, AIDS, Lyme disease, syphilis, sarcoidosis, viral infections, pregnancy (3rd trimester when increased vascular volume can risk facial edema and nerve compression)
Functions of CN VII
- Controls the muscles of the neck, the forehead and facial expressions
- Controls eyelids to close shut and the mouth for smiling
- Controls perceived sound volume
- Taste sensation anterior 2/3 of tongue
- Controls secretions in the tear glands and salivary glands
Clinical Presentation
Abrupt onset over hours, with maximal facial weakness at 24-72 hours
Symptoms usually unilateral
Symptoms vary depending on level of lesion that is preventing transmission of nerve impulses down the facial nerve
Etiology of lesion is unclear, but causes anoxia and swelling of the facial nerve
Involves innervation of forehead, eye, mouth
History
Onset, evolution, presentation of symptoms
Effect of symptoms on day-to-day functioning
Control of DM, HTN, hyperlipidemia
Recent herpes zoster infection
May be ear involvement
Ramsey Hunt syndrome (vesicles on TM)
Subjective
Inability to close the eye; dry eye or tearing
- Inability to wrinkle forehead/grimace
Asymmetrical smile
- Normal facial sensation
Sound hypersensitivity (hyperacusis) on affected side, ear pain
Loss of taste (anterior 2/3 of the tongue)
- Headache
Source:
Physical Exam for Bell’s Palsy: What will you include?
Objective
- At rest: the loss of facial muscle tone causes downward droopiness of the brow, eyelid, nostril, lip, and cheek on the affected (paralyzed) side of the face
- Functional:
- loss of the dynamic muscles of the lip and cheek result in abnormal lip and oral function affecting chewing, retaining fluid while drinking, speech patterns and communication skills.
- Weakness of the circular muscles around the eye causes incomplete eye closure (lagopthalmos), excessive corneal exposure and tearing, and the inability to smile
- Bell’s phenomenon: upward diversion of the eye on attempted closure of the lid (seen when eye closure is incomplete)
Facial nerve palsy can be graded using the House-Brackmann Scale, which ranges between Grade I (normal function) and VI (no movement)
Grade I– Normal
Normal symmetrical function
Grade II – Mild dysfunction
Slight weakness noticeable only on close inspection
Complete eye closure with minimal effort
Slight asymmetry of smile with maximal effort
Synkinesis (unwanted facial movements) barely noticeable, contracture, or spasm absent
Grade III – Moderate dysfunction
Obvious weakness, but not disfiguring
May not be able to lift eyebrow
Complete eye closure and strong but asymmetrical mouth movement
Obvious, but not disfiguring synkinesis, mass movement or spasm
Grade IV – Moderately severe dysfunction
Obvious disfiguring weakness
Inability to lift brow
Incomplete eye closure and asymmetry of mouth with maximal effort
Severe synkinesis, mass movement, spasm
Grade V – Severe dysfunction
Motion barely perceptible
Incomplete eye closure, slight movement corner mouth
Synkinesis, contracture, and spasm usually absent
Grade VI – Total paralysis
No movement, loss of tone, no synkinesis, contracture, or spasm
Reference: House JW, Brackmann DE. Facial nerve grading system. Otolaryngol. Head Neck Surg 1985; 93: 146–147.
Differential Diagnosis:
Infectious etiologies (OM, herpes zoster, Ramsay Hunt syndrome, Lyme disease, chronic meningitis, bacterial meningitis, osteomyelitis)
Neoplastic lesions (acoustic neuromas, parotid tumors)
Other neuro causes (CVA, Guillain-Barre syndrome, MS, sarcoidosis)
Trauma
Clinical Pearls
(Source: Piercy, J. (June 11, 2005). 10-minute consultation: Bell’s palsy. BMJ, 330: 1374.)
Is it Bell’s palsy or a CVA?
oA lower motor neuron lesion occurs with Bell’s palsy, causing weakness of all the muscles of facial expression (angle of mouth falls, weakness of frontalis occurs, eye closure is weak)
oAn upper motor neuron is associated with a cerebrovascular accident; frontalis is spared, normal furrowing of the brow is preserved, and eye closure and blinking are not affected
Check that no other cranial nerves are involved.
oBell’s palsy affects only CN VII
oCheck for a painful rash over the ear, which indicates Ramsay Hunt syndrome caused by herpes zoster virus
Diagnostic Studies for Bell’s Palsy: Diagnosis of Exclusion
(Usually no testing is necessary unless diagnosis is in question)
CBC with diff; ESR; FBS (Hgb A1c if known to have diabetes)
Lyme titer
Electromyography (EMG)—not routinely done (not very reliable until after 2 weeks, when it may detect denervation and demonstrate nerve regeneration)
Clinical Management
Most will recover either totally or to an acceptable degree cosmetically and functionally
Increasing age is a risk factor for a less-than-complete recovery.
Pharmacologic Measures
To prevent corneal injury: methylcellulose drops (hourly lubrication drops during day)
- Antivirals
- Acyclovir 400 mg by mouth 5 times/day X 10 days
Corticosteroids
o60-80 mg/dayfor 5 days, then taper and d/c by 14th day
oUse cautiously in patients with diabetes
oBest results if started within 3-4 days of symptom onset
Nonpharmacologic Measures
Patch or tape down affected eye at night; eye ointment
Controversial:
ofacial nerve decompression
oFacial nerve graft
oNerve anastomosis
Electromyography stimulation (to prevent muscle atrophy) – Need PT referral
Prognosis
Improvement usually begins within 1-2 weeks; total recovery of function usually within 2-4 months
The younger the individual, the most complete the remission
- Risk factors associated with poor outcome
- Age > 60 years
- Complete paralysis
- Decreased taste or salivary flow on the side of paralysis
90% have complete remission
10% have some permanent paralysis
2.Trigeminal (CN V) Neuralgia (also known as Tic Douloureux)
Etiology: thought to be related to compression of trigeminal nerve, perhaps from vascular loop. Other causes:
benign tumors (meningioma, acoustic neuroma)
plaque formation in multiple sclerosis
Symptoms
Intense, stabbing pain within distribution of trigeminal nerve
oRange: 1-2 attacks/day to 10-20/hour
oMore pronounced during day
Source:
Trigger points:
otouching of the face
owind blowing across the face
ohot or cold liquids
May begin spontaneously or with facial movements such as speaking, chewing
Usually unilateral
Involves 2nd(maxillary) or 3rd(mandibular) division of trigeminal; rarely ophthalmic division
Majority > age 50
Women > men
Diagnosis
oGuidelines from the American Academy of Neurology recommend that all patients with trigeminal neuralgia have MRI or trigeminal reflex testing, since up to 15% of patients have an underlying structural cause such as a tumor. (Source:
Treatment
Pain relief: anticonvulsant meds
ocarbamazepine (Tegretol) – 80% effective
initial dose: 200 mg/day
increase slowly (100-200 mg every 2-3 days)
Check CBC and LFTs periodically
- oxcarbazepine (Trileptal)
ophenytoin (Dilantin) – 50% effective
- gabapentin (Neurontin) (if pain refractory to carbamazepine); better tolerated than carbamazepine by elderly patients
- lamotrigine (Lamictal)
Surgical therapy
opercutaneous trigeminal neurolysis
omicrovascular decompression
3.Herpes Zoster (Alias: Shingles)
Epidemiology
Incidence rises with increasing age
About 20% of general population will experience zoster
Approximately 50% of people who live beyond age 80 can expect to have zoster
Nearly 70% occur in people > age 50
No difference in gender, race, or season
Etiology
Acute varicella infection, usually as child
Latent virus takes up residency in the sensory nerve ganglia
Periodically reverts to infectious state, but held at bay by immune functions (= contained reversion)
As immune function declines, host resistance drops,”contained” reversion eventually breaks through to cause herpes zoster
Clinical Presentation
Usually heralded by dermatomal pain, sometimes accompanied by malaise, fever
Pain precedes vesicular eruption by 2-3 days
oReports of 2 weeks to 100 days before!
Within few days: skin overlying the dermatome reddens and blisters
A few vesicles are usually grouped on an erythematous base (vs. scattered, single vesicles of chickenpox)
Several days later: vesicles become pustular and develop crusts.
Scabs form.
o*At this point, the lesions no longer contain virus
Thoracic dermatomes most often affected
May affect > 1 dermatome
Early Diagnosis Important
Prompt recognition of herpes zoster infection is important because antiviral therapy, when appropriate, is maximally effective only when started during the earliest stages of the eruption
Course of herpes zoster
Depends on patient’s age, immune status
New lesions continue to appear for 2-3 days
Lesions usually crust/scab within 14 days
Pain may linger for several more days
The older the patient, the longer the duration of zoster-associated pain
Elderly: greatest risk of postherpetic neuralgia
Diagnosis
Usually clinical diagnosis with no lab testing needed
Tricky: herpes simplex vs. herpes zoster
oHSV may mimic zoster, esp. when on thighs, buttocks, or face
oFrequent recurrences = hallmark of HSV
Consider this first when an immunocompetent patient reports repeated outbreaks of herpetic lesions
Lesions of sacrum: sacral zoster vs. anal HSV
If unsure: viral antigen assays
Can It Recur?
< 5% of immunocompetent patients who have 1 episode of herpes zoster will have another; if so, usually separated by years
This may change as we live longer
50% of recurrent zoster in immunocompetent adults develops in same dermatome as previous outbreaks
Subsequent episodes may be more painful, possibly because the patient is older
Ramsey Hunt syndrome
Facial paralysis that resembles Bell’s palsy
Zoster skin lesions are not prominent because the facial nerve has little cutaneous distribution
Small herpetic vesicles on external surface of ear, auditory canal, TM, hard palate
Ophthalmic involvement
15% have involvement in the ophthalmic distribution of the trigeminal nerve
Hutchinson’s sign: lesion on the tip of the nose
oTip-off to corneal involvement and associated keratitis
Can have eye involved without Hutchinson’s sign being present
Ophthalmologist referral
What Do You Think?
Should herpes zoster in an apparently healthy young or middle-aged adult always trigger a search for HIV infection or occult malignancy?
Treatment
The sooner antiviral therapy is started, the more likely the benefit
oCritical period: 48-72 hrs. after onset of rash
Antiviral therapy to reduce inflammation, relieve acute pain, prevent chronic pain, & prevent ophthalmic complications: 7 days
oAcyclovir (Zovirax): 800 mg q4h 5X/day
oFamciclovir (Famvir) 500-750 mg tid
oValacyclovir (Valtrex) 1000 mg tid
Some choose to co-administer low-dose corticosteroids to reduce inflammation and chance of postherpetic neuralgia
Steroids, however, carry a risk for potentiating the infection as well as producing adverse effects
Postherpetic neuralgia (PHN)
“The pain that lingers”
Seen almost exclusively in elderly patients
May persist weeks to months, even years
May result from damage to the sensory ganglia caused by virus
Treatment for PHN
Topicals: capsaicin cream (Zostrix), Burrow’s solution, calamine lotion, ethyl chloride spray, lidocaine/prilocaine cream
Systemic: tricyclic antidepressants (Elavil), anticonvulsants (Tegretol), antivirals (Zovirax)
Other: TENS, lidocaine injection, nerve block injections, nerve resectioning
Prevention of Herpes Zoster
oZostavax vaccination
oWho should receive vaccine
oMedicare coverage; charging for the vaccination
4.Temporal Arteritis (As known as Giant Cell Arteritis)
When an elderly person develops a H/A, it is important to include temporal arteritis in the list of differential diagnoses! (also consider it in older adult with high ESR and normal WBC even if HA is absent)
Rare in persons under 60 years old
A vasculitic disorder
- occurs when the temporal arteries, which supply blood to the head and brain, become inflamed or damaged
Produces temporal H/A
Clinical Presentation
Headache (75-80% of patients)
- Jaw claudication (pain with chewing) (50% of patients)
Local tenderness to palpation of the forehead and temporal arteries
Visual loss (15-30%)
- Polymyalgia rheumatica (34-60% of patents)
Systemic c/o weight loss, anorexia, weakness, and low-grade fever (15% of patients) may precede H/A
Assessment/Diagnostic Studies
ESR elevated (often > 50-80)
Increased serum globulins
Diagnosis is confirmed by a temporal artery biopsy, whichshows distinctive inflammatory changes (biopsy can be done up to 2-4 weeks after steroid started)
Clinical Management
Immediate initiation of high-dose steroid treatment
orelieves H/A and systemic sx.
onormalizes ESR in about 4 weeks
Medical emergency: ischemia may cause blindness due to retinal infarct, MI, CVA
Many episode-free after 1-2 years of treatment
Current Research: Patients with giant-cell arteritis (GCA) had higher rates of heart attacks, strokes, and peripheral artery disease than people without GCA.
- Unsure of causation
- Recommendation: appropriate preventative measures, noting of early warning signs, and prompt treatment
- (Source: Tomasson, G, Peloquin C., et al, Risk for cardiovascular disease early and late after a diagnosis of giant-cell arteritis: A cohort study. Annals of Internal Medicine, 2014.)
B.Central Disorders
- Headache
Headache is a subjective feeling of pain caused by a variety of intracranial and extracranial factors.
- One of the most common complaints in adult and children, with most headaches being self-treated with an OTC analgesic.
- The vast majority of headaches are acute, self-limited, and do not pose imminent danger or serious sequelae.
Goals for the practitioner in evaluating a headache are to:
1.Identify life-threatening causes of headache,
2.Diagnose treatable disease associated with some headaches, and
3.Provide symptom relief.
Primary headaches: characterized by the absence of structural pathology or systemic disease; they account for > 90% of all headaches.
- Migraine
- Tension-type headache
- Cluster headache and other trigeminal autonomic cephalgias
- Other primary headaches
Secondary headaches: those caused by an identifiable organic pathology, one that is confined to the meninges or to the cerebral parenchyma. These include headaches attributed to:
- head/neck trauma, cranial or cervical vascular disorder, non-vascular intracranial disorder
- substance or its withdrawal
- infection
- psychiatric disorder
Pain from headache arises from stimulation of pain-sensitive structures of the head and brain caused by traction, inflammation, vascular dilatation, muscle contraction, or dysregulation of ascending brainstem serotonergic systems.
Generally:
•Pain arising from disordered function, damage, or inflammation of structures located anterior to and above the tentorium is felt in the front of the head
•Pain felt in the back of the head arises from structures located below the tentorium
•Extracranial structures that are sensitive to pain include the skin, scalp, blood vessels, facial muscles, eyes, ears, teeth, nasal cavity, mucous membranes of the mouth and pharynx, and the TMJ.
•The substance of the brain itself is not sensitive to pain, but sensitive structures include the blood vessels, sensory nerves, and ganglia.
60% of new-onset headaches and 90% of chronic headaches are migraine or tension.
First, identify if this is a life-threatening headache!
What clues indicate this is a potentially serious, life-threatening headache?
- may first need to assess whether the patient is fully oriented before proceeding with further history (Mini-Mental State Examination)
- If patient shows a mental status deficit, transport for immediate emergency treatment
Warning Signs of Serious Causes of Headache:
- Stiff neck
- Disturbed consciousness
- Abrupt onset of severe pain (“worst headache ever”)
- Neurological deficit
- Progressively worsening
- Vomiting
- New onset in persons 50 years or older
Key Questions
•How did the headache begin?
•On a scale from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst pain ever) how severe is the pain?
•Is there a history of recent trauma to the head?
•Was there a loss of consciousness?
•Do you notice any other symptoms associated with the headache pain?
•Do you have any chronic health problems?
* Sudden onset of a severe headache without a history of chronic headache suggests an intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) secondary to a ruptured aneurysm or vascular anomaly.
Headache of ICH without a history of trauma is rare in children and adolescents, but the incidence increases with age, especially in persons over 50 years old or in someone who is being treated with anticoagulation therapy.
After determining the headache is not serious, how can I narrow down the causes?
Key Questions
•Where does it hurt?
- Pain secondary to trauma or inflammation is perceived as near the site of insult
- Tension headaches are described as a “hatband” distribution of pain by adults, but as a generalized headache or discomfort by children.
- Orbital pain is seen with increased intraocular pressure.
- Periorbital pain may present with sinusitis, migraine, trigeminal neuralgia, or it may be a sign of ocular disease.
- Contraction of muscles of the head and neck cause headaches that are nonpulsatile, occurring in the occipital and paracervical region.
•What does it feel like?
•When does it occur? What makes it worse?
•How long have you had this headache?
•Can you tell when it is coming on?
- A moderately intense, constant throbbing headache is associated with dilatation of the cerebral arteries.
- Severe pain indicates an expanding lesion, such as a tumor or hematoma, edema, or enlargement of the ventricles secondary to hydrocephalus.
- Migraine headache pain is steady or throbbing and is usually limited to the same side; caused by the production of various substances on dilated arteries that sensitize those arteries to pain.
- Cluster headaches (uncommon in children) are the result of an unknown vascular change that occurs within a period of 5 minutes.
- Tension (muscle contraction) headaches usually occur at school or work and often disappear on weekends and vacations or during periods of relaxation.
What does the chronicity of pain suggest?