- Neurological examination
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Neurological examination Intervention
The human nervous systemICD-9-CM 89.13 MeSH D009460 A neurological examination is the assessment of sensory neuron and motor responses, especially reflexes, to determine whether the nervous system is impaired.[1] It can be used both as a screening tool and as an investigative tool, the former of which when examining the patient when there is no expected neurological deficit and the latter of which when examining a patient where you do expect to find abnormalities.[2] If a problem is found either in an investigative or screening process then further tests can be carried out to focus on a particular aspect of the nervous system (such as lumbar punctures and blood tests).
Generally a neurological examination is focused towards finding out if there are lesions in the central and peripheral nervous systems or whether there is another diffuse process which is troubling the patient.[2] Once the patient has been thoroughly tested, it is then the role of the physician to determine whether or not these findings combine to form a recognizable medical syndrome such as Parkinson's disease or motor neurone disease.[2] Finally, it is the role of the physician to find the etiological reasons for why such a problem has occurred, for example finding if the problem was due to inflammation or congenital.[2]
Contents
History
A patient's history is the most important part of a neurological examination[2] and must be performed before any other procedures unless impossible (i.e. the patient is unconscious).[citation needed] Certain aspects of a patients history will become more important depending upon the complaint issued.[2] Important factors to be taken in the medical history include:
Handedness is important in establishing the area of the brain important for language (as almost all right-handed people have a left hemisphere which is responsible for language). As patients answer questions, it is important to gain an idea of the complaint thoroughly and understand its time course. Understanding the patient's neurological state at the time of questioning is important, and an idea should be obtained of how competent the patient is with various tasks and their level of impairment in carrying out these tasks. The interval of a complaint is important as it can help aid the diagnosis. For example, vascular disorders occur very frequently over minutes and hours, whereas congenital disorders occur over a matter of years.[2]
Carrying out a 'general' examination is just as important as the neurological exam as it may lead to clues to the etiology of the complaint. This is shown by cases of cerebral metastases where the initial complaint was of a mass in the breast.[2]
List of tests
Specific tests in a neurological examination include:
Category Tests Example of writeup Mental status examination - The assessment of consciousness, often using the Glasgow Coma Scale (EMV)
- Mental status examination, often including the abbreviated mental test score (AMTS) or mini mental state examination (MMSE)
- Global assessment of higher functions
- Intracranial pressure is roughly estimated by fundoscopy; this also enables assessment for microvascular disease.
"A&O x 3, short and long-term memory intact" Cranial nerve examination Cranial nerves (I-XII): sense of smell (I), visual fields and acuity (II), eye movements (III, IV, VI) and pupils (III, sympathetic and parasympathetic), sensory function of face (V), strength of facial (VII) and shoulder girdle muscles (XI), hearing (VII, VIII), taste (VII, IX, X), pharyngeal movement and reflex (IX), tongue movements (XII). These are tested by their individual purposes (e.g. the visual acuity can be tested by a Snellen chart). "CNII-XII grossly intact" Motor - Muscle strength, often graded on the MRC scale 1 to 5 (or I to V).
- Muscle tone and signs of rigidity.
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- Tone
- Spasticity
- Pronator drift
- Rigidity
- Cogwheeling (abnormal tone suggestive of Parkinson's disease)
- Gegenhalten - is resistance to passive change, where the strength of antagonist muscles increases with increasing examiner force. More common in dementia.
- Spasticity
- Tone
"strength 5/5 throughout, tone WNL" Deep tendon reflexes Reflexes: masseter, biceps and triceps tendon, knee tendon, ankle jerk and plantar (i.e. Babinski sign). Globally, brisk reflexes suggest an abnormality of the UMN or pyramidal tract, while decreased reflexes suggest abnormality in the anterior horn, LMN, peripheral nerve or motor end plate. A reflex hammer is used for this testing. "2+ symmetric, downgoing plantar reflex" Sensation Sensory system testing involves provoking sensations of fine touch, pain and temperature. Fine touch can be evaluated with a monofilament test, touching various dermatomes with a nylon monofilament to detect any subjective absence of touch perception.
- Sensory
- Light touch
- Pain
- Temperature
- Vibration
- Position sense
- Graphesthesia
- Stereognosis, and
- Two-point discrimination (for discriminative sense)
- Extinction
"intact to sharp and dull throughout" Cerebellum - Cerebellar testing
- Dysmetria
- Finger-to-nose test
- Ankle-over-tibia test
- Dysdiadochokinesis
- Rapid pronation-supination
- Ataxia
- Assessment of gait
- Nystagmus
- Intension tremor
- Staccato speech
- Romberg test to examine proprioception or cerebellar function
- Dysmetria
"Romberg negative, intact finger-to-nose, gait WNL" Interpretation
The results of the examination are taken together to anatomically identify the lesion. This may be diffuse (e.g. neuromuscular diseases, encephalopathy) or highly specific (e.g. abnormal sensation in one dermatome due to compression of a specific spinal nerve by a tumor deposit). A differential diagnosis may then be constructed that takes into account the patient's background (e.g. previous cancer, autoimmune diathesis) and present findings to include the most likely causes. Examinations are aimed at ruling out the most clinically significant causes (even if relatively rare, e.g. brain tumor in a patient with subtle word finding abnormalities but no increased intracranial pressure) and ruling in the most likely causes.[citation needed]
References
- ^ "Terminology". http://www.suffolk.edu/campuslife/11495.html. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Fuller, Geraint (2004). Neurological Examination Made Easy. Churchill Livingstone. p. 1. ISBN 0-443-07420-8.
- ^ Oommen, Kalarickal. "Neurological History and Physical Examination". http://www.emedicine.com/neuro/topic632.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-22.
External links
- Overview at University of California, San Diego
- Overview at University of Toronto
- neuro/632 at eMedicine - "Neurological History and Physical Examination"
Medical records and physical exam Admission CC · HPI (OPQRST) · ROS · Allergies/Medications · PMH/PSH/FH/SH
Psychiatric historyGeneral/IPPAHEENTCardiovascularBack (Straight leg raise) · Knee (McMurray test) · Hip · Wrist (Tinel sign, Phalen maneuver) · Shoulder (Adson's sign) · GALS screenNeuroNeonatalL/IA/PProgress Medical privacy Surgery, Nervous system: neurosurgical and other procedures (ICD-9-CM V3 01–05+89.1, ICD-10-PCS 00-01) Skull CNS thalamus and globus pallidus: Thalamotomy · Thalamic stimulator · Pallidotomy
ventricular system: Ventriculostomy · Suboccipital puncture · Intracranial pressure monitoring
cerebrum: Psychosurgery (Lobotomy, Bilateral cingulotomy) · Hemispherectomy · Anterior temporal lobectomy
pituitary: Hypophysectomy
hippocampus: Amygdalohippocampectomy
Brain biopsyCerebral meningesSpinal cord and roots (Cordotomy, Rhizotomy)
Vertebrae and intervertebral discs: see Template:Bone, cartilage, and joint proceduresCT head · Cerebral angiography · Pneumoencephalography · Echoencephalography/Transcranial doppler · MRI of brain and brain stem · Brain PET · SPECT of brain · MyelographyDiagnosticPNS Sympathetic nerves or gangliaNerves (general)DiagnosticCategories:- Neurology procedures
- Physical examination
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