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Principles of general neurology
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The 1st week Mon - Wed General neurology Thur Paediatric neurology Fri Disorders of consciousness The 2nd week Mon Strokes Tue Parkinson´s disease and syndromes Wed Dyskinesias Thur Epilepsy Fri Meningitis, encephalitis, myelitis, radiculoneuritis
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The 3rd week Mon Neuromuscular diseases and neuropathies Tue Neuro-oncology Wed Traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries Thur Multiple sclerosis Fri Spinal disorders and basic compression syndromes of peripheral nerve The 4th week Mon Sleep disorders Tue Pain Wed Dementia Thur Paediatric neurology Fri Propedaedeutic examination + EXAM
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Lectures http://www.neuro.lf1.cuni.cz/eng/vyuka/in dex.php?page=prezentace_5r
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Medical history
Neurological examination
Interpretation of acquired data - formulating clinical suspicion
Indication of relevant auxiliary investigative techniques with clearly formulated presumption Exception: traumatic injury, altered consciousness
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Interpretation of acquired data formulating clinical suspicion
Syndromologic (semiologic) diagnosis: summary of individual symptoms/signs of disease clustered in characteristic combination
Topical diagnosis: level of lesion within the neural systém
Nosological diagnosis: clinical entity (disease) characterized by neurological syndrome, along with clinical course, treatment response etc.
Etiological diagnosis: cause of neural lesion, often special targeted examination methods are necessarily indicated
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Basic terms
Symptom: individual presentation
Syndrome: 2 a more symptoms present together in an individual in characteristic combination (important for topology, e.g. parkinsonian syndrome – lesion of basal ganglia, or for pathogenesis, e.g. meningism indicates inflammation of meninges)
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Paresis: decrease in muscular strength, partial paralysis Plegia: loss of muscle strength, complete paralysis monoparesis: one limb affected diparesis: 2 limbs affected triparesis: 3 limbs affected quadriparesis: all limbs affected
hemiparesis: limbs of one body side affected (left / right) paraparesis: both lower limbs affected
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Basic terms
Superficial sensation - algic and thermic (spinothalamic pathway): • algic - pain • thermic – heat, cold
Superficial sensation - tactile (posterior funicles and spinothalamic pathway): • tactile – touch, dicriminative...
Deep sensation (posterior funicles): • pallesthesia = capability of sensing vibrations • proprioception, kinesthesia =capability of sensing position, direction and changes of movement speed
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Basic terms
anesthesia: complete loss of sensation in respective body part hypesthesia: reduced sensationi hyperesthesia: enhanced sensation paresthesia: abnormal somatosensory perception in absence of external stimulus (spontaneous pins and needles, freezing, burning etc.) dysesthesia: erroneous perception of real somatosensory stimulus (touch as burning, heat as cold etc.) allodynia: painful sensation induced by stimulus that is not usually associated with pain
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Peripheral and central nervous system
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Levels of peripheral nervous system
Muscle
Neuromuscular junction
Peripheral nerve (motor-sensitive-mixed)
Plexus
Roots: (dorsal root, ventral root, combined root lesion)
Peripheral (caudal) motor neuron
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Levels of central nervous system
Spinal cord Brain
Infratentorial area
-brainstem -cerebellum
Supratentorial area
-white matter of hemispheres -thalamus -basal ganglia -cortex
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Basal differences between peripheral and central lesion
Parameter
Peripheral lesion
Central lesion
Deep tendon reflexes Muscle tone
Pyramidal signs
-
+
Disordered sensation + (radic. area, nerv.)
+ (large regions)
Muscle atrophy
+
-
Fasciculations
+
-
Muscle weakness
+(radic. area, nerv.)
(late, from inactivity) + (large regions)
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Peripheral lesion – flaccid paresis
Central lesion - spastic paresis
Pseudoflaccid stage: first 2-3 weeks after acute lesion of pyramidal pathways hypotonia and areflexia (parallel to spinal shock)
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Peripheral lesion
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Muscle lesion – clinical characterization
Muscle weakness (localization depends on distribution of affected muscles, more often proximal)
atrophy, hypotrophy, pseudohypertrophy
hypotonia
reduced (but may be also adequate) stretch proprioceptive reflexes
absent disorder of sensation but pain may be present (myositis, rhabdomyolysis)
(myopatic climb)
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Disorders of neuromuscular junction (myasthenic pattern)
muscular fatigue, weakness depending on preceding physical effort
no sensory deficit
no pain
normal muscle tone
normal proprioceptive reflexes
normal muscle mass (-trophy)
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Lesion of peripheral nerve
muscle weakness in „area nervina“ distribution
disorder of sensation in „area nervina“ or „glove-like, sock-like“ distribution (not always present – depends whether the nerve with sensitive component is affected)
Pain may be present
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Areae nervorum
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Areae nervorum
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Diffuse lesion of peripheral nerves
muscle weakness that doesn´t correspond to particular area nervina (most often acral localization) frequently present after sensation disorder
altered sensation in „glove-/sock-like“ distribution (not always present – depends on the fact whether the nerve with sensitive component is affected)
pain may be present
Etiology: diffuse lesion (inflammatory, metabolic…)
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Lesion of plexus
Muscle weakness and hypotonia Altered sensation in distribution noncorresponding to area nervina, radicularis (larger, several segments)
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Lesion of dorsal root sensory disorder pain in distribution of area radicularis no muscle weakness no fasciculations Lesion of ventral root muscle weakness in distribution of area radicularis fasciculation no sensory disorder no pain Lesion of lower motor neuron muscle weakness and hypotonia in distribution of damaged neurons – otherwise identical to ventral root lesion
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Radicular lesion
Sensory neurons dorsal root Innervated skin area = dermatome
alpha motor neurons in anterior horns of spinal cord– axons form ventral root project through plexus and peripheral nerves into muscle groups = myotome
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Chipault´s rule
Spines of upper C vertebrae lower C vertabrea upper Th vertabrae lower Th vertebra Th10-Th12 Trans.: Th12-L1 vertebra L1 -
Segment identical +1 +2 +3 L epiconus conus
Diagram of root exit points
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Syndrome of cauda (common in prolapsed disc)
Irritative Severe pain in assymetric radicular distribution
Destructive Assymetric disorder of sensation - radicular distribution Areflexia (corresponding to affected roots) Weakness (corresponding to affected roots) Sphincter disturbance
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MRI sequestrum
CT prolapse
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Syndrome of conus, epiconus: vertebral body level: Th12-L1
Conus (S3-5) – often tumor, traumatic injury Altered perianogenital sensation Urinary retention, fecal incontinence Erectile dysfunction No marked pain Bilateral symmetric presentation
Epiconus The same as in conus +weakness of plantar, dorsal flexion of foot, areflexia L5-S2
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conus, epiconus
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Central lesion – spinal cord
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Image of spinal cord
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General characteristics of spinal cord lesions
Lesion of spinal cord
Motor disorders Peripheral paresis in affected segment Central paresis under the affected segment
Posture stability and gait disturbances
Altered sensation
Sphincter dysfunction (retention or incontinence)
Backache and constrictive sensations in certain segments
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Transversal lesion of spinal cord
Plegia distally from the localization of lesion (Acute: spinal shock – plegia - hypotonia, absent pyramidal signs etc. - duration: hours to weeks) Combined with peripheral paralysis according to localization (Lesions above C5 are not compatible with life without artificial ventilation.)
Anesthesia distally from the localization of lesion (sometimes hyperesthesia on the margin of anesthesia) !Margin of sensation!
Sphincter dysfunctions Acute: Retention of urine or paradoxical ischuria Chronic: automatic (spinal) bladder
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SPINAL SYNDROMES: central cord syndrome :
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Central cord syndrome The most common causes: traumatic injury, tumor or ischemia. Basic characterization – Bilateral disruption of algic, heat and cold sensitivity within affected segments, with continual spread in caudal direction, usually with sacral preservation.
Focal spinal cords pathologies
Syringomyelic dissociation of sensitivity
Later – development of peripheral paresis on the level of affected segments (lesion of motor neurons).
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Diagram of sensitive pathways
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syringomyelia
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Intramedular tumor
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Focal pathologies of spinal cord
anterolateral syndrome The most common cause: ischemia. Basic characterization – Peripheral paresis on the level of affected segments. Central paresis caudally from lesion level - results from lesion of descendent pathways. Sensation of heat, cold and algic stimuli is affected. Preserved tactile and deep sensory functions.
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Image of anterolateral lesion.
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Focal pathologies of spinal cord
Brown-Sequard´s syndrome (unilateral) The most common cause: traumatic injury. Basic characterization: On the homolateral side: Peripheral paresis on the level of lesion central paresis below the lesion Sensory disturbance – deep and tactile
On the contralateral side: No motor disorder Disrupted sensory f. – heat, cold, algic (incipient typically on the level lower by 2-3 segments)
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Diagram of Brown.Séquard´s syndrome
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Posterior column syndrome (tabic syndrome)
The most common cause: neurosyphilis, metabolic diseases (diabetes mellitus) Basic characterization No paresis Ataxia, areflexia Loss of deep and also (partially) tactile sensory functions - below the lesion level. Algic and thermic sensory functions are preserved – but with common occurence of paresthesias and shooting pains.
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Posterior and lateral columns syndrome
The most common cause: Friedreich´s disease, other degenerative diseases, deficiency of vit. B12. Basic characterization: central (spastic) paresis, characteristic spasticatactic gait ataxia (from disruption of proprioception and cerebellar ataxia from lesion of spinocerebellar pathways) Disruption of deep and tactile sensory functions. Preserved algic and thermic sensory f.
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Expansive process arising from the bone and compressing spinal cord.
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Identification of lesion level
Patient with paraparesis of the lower limbs L2-S2 increased, C5-8 normal i.e.: lesion above L2 and under C8 More precise identification: Limit margin of sensory changes Event. Calculation according to Chippault´s rule
Patient with peripheral paresis of the upper limbs and central paresis of the lower limbs lesion C5-8
Patient with central quadriparesis without lesion of cranial nerves C1-C4 (C4-phrenic n. – threatening of vital f.)
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Central lesions – the brain
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Cerebral lesions – clinical characterization
General presentation headache altered consciousness generalized epileptic paroxysms intracranial hypertension Focal signs focal neurological deficit focal epileptic paroxysms affected cranial nerves speech disturbances and other cognitive dysfunctions
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Infratentorial region
Clinical characterization
Lesion of cranial nerves Altered consciousness Alternating pattern of hemiparesis or sensory disturbance (peripheral lesion of cranial nerves on the contralateral side to hemiparesis) Hemi- or quadri-paresis, sensory disturbance
Nausea, vomiting, vertigo Nystagmus Disorder of posture, stability and gait Disruption of upper limb coordination
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Brainstem localization of motor pathway: alternating hemiplegias/paresis (hemiplegiae alternantes)
Mesencephalon (n. III): superior alternating hemiplegia (Weber)
Pons (n. VI a VII): middle alternating hemiplegia (Millard-Gubler)
Oblongata (n. XII): inferior alternating hemiplegia (Déjerine)
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alternating hemiparesis
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Bulbar syndrome
Lesion of nuclei of nn. IX. – XII. bilaterally (+ V. a VII.) Dysarthria, dysphagia Lingual atrophy with fasciculations, depression of soft palate, extinct gag reflex, extinct masseter r. (+ paresis of facial muscles)
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Pseudobulbar syndrome
Bilateral lesion of corticonuclear (corticobulbar) pathway heading to motor nuclei of nn. IX. – XII. Dysphagia, dysarthria
Tongue without atrophy, fasciculations Present masseter r., gag r. +emotionalsigns:„spastic“ laughter and cry
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Peripheral paresis of facial nerve Lesion of peripheral nerve anywhere within its length
Paresis or plegia of the whole homolateral half of the face Smoothed wrinkles on the forehead and inability to close the eye Smoothed nasolabial sulcus and drooping mouth corner
Etiology: passage of facial nerve through petrose bone, often viral etiology Above the branching of chorda tympani – hypogeusia on anterior 2/3s of tongue Above the branching of stapedius n. – hyperacusia
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Central paresis of facial nerve
Supranuclear lesion of corticobulbar pathway
Paresis of facial muscles in the lower half of the face, contralaterally:
Drooping of the corner of the mouth Smoothed nasolabial sulcus Disruption of showing teeth, whistling Weakness of platysma
Etiology: frequent presentation of stroke on the contralateral side
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Syndrome of pontocerebellar angle
Hypacusis, tinnitus, vertigo
Peripheral paresis of n. VII. Unilateral extinction of corneal r.
Cerebellar syndrome
Etiology: Schwannoma of n. VIII., meningiomas
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Neurinoma of n. VIII
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Cerebellum
Physiological functions
Regulation of muscle tone
balance
Movement coordination
Movement course and targeting, positioning of body segments, recruitment of muscle groups during the movement
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Structure and functions of cerebellum
Archicerebellum (pars floculonodularis) vestibular afferents - balance Paleocerebellum (vermis, tonsils, anterior lobe) Spinal afferents – muscle tone Neocerebellum (most of hemispheres) Cortical afferents – movement coordination
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Paleocerebellar syndrome
Axial ataxia (axial disequilibrium)
astasia – uncertain standing with wide basis, deviations, falls without side preference
abasia – uncertainty when walking, widen basis, deviations, falls without side preference
large asynergy – dysfunction of axial muscles coordination – improper measuring of movements during standing up, sitting, rising
titubation – swaying tremor of the head and upper trunk
dysarthria
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Neocerebellar syndrome
Limb ataxia, ipsilateral to affected cerebellar hemisphere
hypermetria
dysdiadochokinesis
little asynergy
intention tremor
hypotonia – increased passiveness, excursion range of joints
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Vestibular apparatus
Physiological functions
Balance
Regulation of muscle tone
Coordination of movements of the head and eyes
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Inner ear: function and structure Hearing Cochlea: Corti´s organ
Balance vestibule: saccule, utricle and 3 semicircular canals with with wide ampullas – registrate changes of head position in the gravitational field and linear acceleration
Hairy cells react to movements of endolymph, to gravity or to acoustic vibrations
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Saccule, utricle: Changes of head position in gravitational field, linear acceleration.
Hairy cells are located in maculas of saccule and utricle. In maculas are located so-called otoliths crystals of calcium carbonate that bend the cilia during change of head position by the effect of gravity.
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Subjective symptoms:
Vestibular syndromes
vertigo, nausea
Objective signs: Nystagmus Balance disorder Tonic deviations of the trunk and limbs
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Nystagmus
Involuntary fast movements of both eyeballs with slow (pathological) and fast (compensatory) component. Nystagmus results from disruption of vestibular system and its neural connections.
Direction Determined by fast component (horizontal, rotational, vertical, combined etc.) Intensity I. grade: present only when looking in direction of the fast component II. grade: apparent in forward gaze as well III. grade: persisting even when looking on the opposite side
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Peripheral – harmonic vestibular syndrome
Logical relation of nystagmus direction to the direction of tonic vestibular deviations (fast component of nystagmus tends against direction of deviations) Tonic deviations depend on the head position
Concomitant symptoms: often hypacusis and tinnitus Nystagmus type: horizontal rotational, doesn´t change the direction Level of lesion: Labyrinth Vestibular n. in the petrose bone, pontocerebellar angle Entrance areas of vestibular nuclei Etiology: BPPV, labyrinthitis, Menier´s disease etc.
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Central - dysharmonic vestibular syndrome
The direction of nystagmus and that of tonic deviations are not logically related. E.g. only nystagmus with vertigo and minimal stability disorder may dominate Nystagmus may be in the same direction as tonic vestibular deviations. Frequent changes of direction and intensity. Accompanying symptoms: sometimes other brainstem sy Type of nystagmus: simply rotational, vertical, diagonal etc. Level of lesion: brainstem (FLM) and vestibular cerebellum
Etiology: demyelination, vascular, parainfectious
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Differentiation between peripheral and central vestibular syndrome Peripheral
Central
(harmonic)
(dysharmonic)
Intensity of vertigo
high
mild, moderate
Nystagmus
one direction
changes direction
Tonic deviation
one direction
variable direction
Compensation
relatively fast
slow, difficult
Other symptoms
auditory
brainstem
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Supratentorial region of the brain
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Supratentorial region
Cortex
Disorders of speech (frontal and temporal lobes) Disorders of practic and gnostic functions (parietal lobes) Behaviour disorders (prefrontal areas of frontal lobes, temporal lobes) hemianopsia (occipital lobes) epileptic paroxysms (character of paroxysm depends on the localization of focus) Pareses and sensory disorders (area of central sulcus)
Long pathways
Sy of internal capsule (capsula interna) Hemiparesis Hemi-distributed sensory disorders
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Lesions of internal capsule - symptoms Contralateral spastic hemiplegia/paresis including nn. XII a VII. (Wernicke-Mann´s type) Contralateral hemianopsoa Contralateral hemianesthesia
(Bilateral lesion: pseudobulbar syndrome in the F portion: spastic laughter and cry and pseudocerebellar symptoms)
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Basal ganglia
caudate nc. putamen gl. pallidus subthalamic nc. ncl. accumbens ncl. basalis Meynerti
related nuclei: amygdala thalamus subst. nigra ncl. ruber pedunculopontine nc.
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Basal ganglia – functional connections
Major neurotransmitters: Dopamine Glutamate GABA Acetylcholine Neuropeptides and others
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Basal gangla – major functions
Body posture
Regulation of muscle tone
Coordination of voluntary and automatic movements
Creating movement programs, triggering and timing movements, adjustment of movements to external conditions
emotionality, cognitive functions, mental integration
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Extrapyramidal syndromes
Hypokinetic (parkinsonian, hypokinetic-rigid, hypokinetic-hypertonic)
Hyperkinetic
tremor
chorea
dystonia
myoclonus
tic
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Thalamus
„Rellaystation“ – last information interlink before entrance to cortex Integration of sensory, motor, vegetative neural activity
Dominating symptoms depend on the localization within thalamus Motor disorders: ataxia, tremor, dystonia
Sensory disorders: hemihypesthesia, anaesthesia dolorosa Thalamic pain;
Altered consciousness
Emotional changes, memory disturbances
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Cortex
Primary cortical centres
Secondary association areas (unimodal association cortex)
Tertiary association areas (multimodal association areas) Posterior parietal area (perception and speech) Limbic area (emotions and memory) Anterior (prefrontal) area (planning of movements)
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Disruptions of cortical areas
Primary sensory areas local anesthesia amaurosis deafness
Primary motor areas
plegia, paresis
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Disorders of associative cortical areas
Unimodal and multimodal association areas Gnostic functions agnosia Practic functions
apraxia
Phatic functions
aphasia
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Disorders of language and speech
language – system of expression and communication means of symbolic character speech – motor production of verbal sounds Acquired neurogenic disorders of using language aphasia, cognitive communication disorder (in dementia) Acquired neurogenic disorders of speech – dysarthria, speech apraxia Diagnosis and therapy of language and speech disorders - logopedy
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Aphasia
Acquired disorder of language (stroke in the territory of internal carotid a., tumor, traumatic head injury)
Focal lesion of brain
Lesion especially in cortical areas (or event. in subcortical areas - thalamus and basal ganglia)
Lesions of dominant hemisphere
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Classification of aphasia (fluent speech) – formerly „sensory aphasia“- posterior lesion - behind central sulcus
Fluent
formerly „motor“ aphasia - anterior lesion - in front of central sulcus
Nonfluent–
aphasia (formerly „mixed“)– caused by extensive lesion of dominant hemisphere
global
Boston classification – the most used classification of aphasia in the world; enables to classify more than ¾ of aphasias
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Symptoms of aphasia
Disordered speech fluency Disordered comprehension Disordered naming Disordered repeating Perseverations Disorders of reading, writing
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Symptoms of aphasia alexia – disorders of reading agraphia – disorders of writing
Disorder of loud reading (often similar symptoms as in spontaneous speech)
Disorder of understanding the text
Disorders of reading and writing may occur also separatedly without aphasia
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Dysarthria
Disorders of speech (disorders of comprehension, naming, forming sentence structure or using grammar are not present…)
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Dysarthria
results from: paresis disrupted muscle tone disordered coordination of muscles involved in speech production lesion
of motor system leading to dysarthria – anywhere along the pathway – from the brain to the particular muscle. Contrary from aphasia – not primarily cortical disorder!
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Dysarthria
cerebellar (atactic) Lesion of cerebellum and its pathways
extrapyramidal-hypokinetic Lesions of basal ganglia, extrapyramidal pathways