quiz #2- peripheral neuropathy

  1. What are the different type of neuropathies?
    • lower motor neurons (has axons that travel to peripheral nerves)
    • radicules (nerve roots)
    • plexus (sacral, lumbar, and brachial)
    • peripheral nerves (some mixed others carry only one fiber type)
  2. What are general signs and symptoms of neuropathies?
    • parasthesia, hyperesthesia, numbness
    • weakness
    • organ or gland dysfunction (ileus, impotence, irregular BP, incontinence)
  3. What is the difference between parasthesia and hyperesthesia?
    parasthesia is unusual sensations and hyperesthesia is heightened sensation
  4. What are general causes of neuropathies?
    • injury
    • infection
    • space occupying lesions (tumors, discs)
    • autoimmune disorders
    • genetic diseases
    • systemic diseases (kidney failure, diabetes, hypothyroidism, toxic substances)
  5. What does hypothyroidism cause (general)?
    decreases conduction velocity of nerves so patients move slower
  6. What is increased itching of the skin a sign of?
    renal failure
  7. How is diagnosis of neuropathies made?
    • complete physical exam and history
    • radigraphic procedures
    • electromyography
  8. What are general treatment procedures of neuropathies?
    • treat underlying disease
    • healthy life style plan
    • control pain
    • assistive devices
    • possible surgery
  9. What are some lower motor neuron disorders?
    • poliomyetlitis (viral)
    • spinal musclular atrophy (inherited)
    • amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (unknown cause)
    • trauma
  10. What is post-polio syndrome?
    • The patient is functional, but weakness and pain gradually starts to set in years after the illness.
    • becoming more rare because those patients will now be over 60 years old
    • now occurs in third world country
  11. What are the three forms of Spinal Musclular Atrophy and their time of onset?
    • infantile: onset first month of life
    • intermediate: onset first year
    • juvenile: onset after 5 years
  12. What chromosome does spinal musclular atrophy deal with?
    • chromosome 5
    • recessive trait
  13. What is Wernig Hoffman Disease?
    • spinal muscular atrophy- type 1 infantile
    • weakness starts right after birth and child often dies before age 3
    • child often dies from respiratory failure
  14. What is the functional ability of individuals with the intermediate form of spinal muscular atrophy?
    • weakness occurs after the first year
    • cognitively the child seems fine, but disabled in terms of motor ability
  15. What muscles does the juvenile form of spinal muscular atrophy affect?
    • proximal muscles
    • (weakness begins in childhood)
  16. What are some characteristics of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis?
    • lower and upper motor neuron involvement
    • 3-8/100,000
    • onset 30-60 years of age
    • respiratory failure in several years
  17. What are sign and symptoms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis?
    • weak
    • atrophy
    • fasiculations
    • difficulty swallowing- so will choke***
  18. What is amyotrophic lateral sclerosis sometimes called?
    Lou Gehrigs disease
  19. What is shingles (general)?
    sensory condition affecting the dorsal root ganglion
  20. What are some characteristics of shingles?
    • reactivation of varicella zoster virus
    • causes blisters and pain in dermatomes
    • antiviral drugs and vaccines
    • have to have chicken pox first
  21. What is a radiculopathy?
    disorder of spinal nerve roots
  22. What are some causes of radiculopathies?
    • herniated disc
    • stenosis
    • herpes zoster, arachnoiditis
    • tumor
    • avulsion
    • cervical rib
  23. What are signs and symptoms of radiculopathies?
    • paresis in myotome
    • diminished or absent reflexes
    • sensory loss in a dermatome (numbness/parasthesia)
    • pain in dermatome
  24. Avulsion of nerve roots usually occurs where during a breech birth?
    • C5 and C6- Erbs Paralysis
    • C8-T1- Klumpke's paralysis (function of hand)
  25. What are some causes of plexus involvement?
    • birth trauma
    • physical trauma
    • radiation therapy
    • chronic compression
  26. When will symptoms from thoracic outlet syndrome be noticeable?
    • elevating arms
    • when driving, one hand will be gripping the steering wheel tightly
  27. What occurs with thoracic outlet syndrome?
    the collar bone and upper ribs compress the scalene muscles which compresses the brachial plexus
  28. What can cause lumbar-sacral plexus?
    • pregnancy
    • hip dislocation
    • abdominal surgery
    • tumors
  29. What are the three types of peripheral neuropathy?
    • mononeuropathy
    • mononeuropathy multiplex
    • polyneuropathy
  30. What is affected in a mononeuropathy?
    one nerve
  31. What is affected in a mononeuropathy multiplex?
    several nerves, but symptoms are asymmetric
  32. What is affected in a polyneuropathy?
    several nerves, but symptoms are symmetric
  33. What are some causes of peripheral neuropahty?
    • trauma
    • toxic agents (chemotherapy, arsenic)
    • infections
    • neoplastic
    • vascular (diabetes)
    • metabolic (kidney failure)
  34. What is Wallerian Degeneration?
    the death process of a cell
  35. What is the rate at which nerves grow?
    1mm/day
  36. What are the three types of peripheral nerve damage and the difference?
    • neuropraxia: conduction block at site of injury, recovers in a few days
    • axonotmesis: nerve fibers disrupted but neural sheaths intact, recovery occurs 1mm/day
    • neurotmesis: severed nerve, distal segment degenerates, no recovery without surgery
  37. What happens with the facial nerve damage?
    • Bell's palsy
    • ipsilateral facial weakness
    • unknown cause and prognosis varies- some recover completely, others don't
  38. What are the causes of radial nerve damage?
    • fracture
    • pressure in axilla
  39. What are signs and symptoms of radial nerve damage?
    • loss of elbow, wrist, and finger extension
    • pain
    • parasthesia
    • loss of sensation on dorsum of hand- radial side
  40. What are causes of ulnar nerve damage?
    • fractures
    • entrapment at elbow
    • compression at elbow
  41. What are symptoms of ulnar nerve damage?
    • weak wrist flexion, atrophy of hypothenar eminence, paralysis of 4th and 5th lumbricals
    • pain, parasthesia, numbness of medial hand
  42. Which is more commonly injured the radial or ulnar nerve?
    ulnar nerve becase it is more exposed at the elbox compared to the radial nerve that's protected
  43. What nerve is damaged with Bishops hand?
    ulnar nerve
  44. What nerve is damaged with a true Claw hand?
    median and ulnar
  45. What nerve is damaged with an Ape's hand and where is there atrophy?
    • median nerve
    • thenar eminence
  46. What are causes of median nerve damage?
    • carpal tunnel syndrome (butchers, pregnancy, typists)
    • trauma
    • compression
  47. What are signs and symptoms of median nerve damage?
    • weak wrist flexion, grip opposition of thumb (especially pinch)
    • sensory loss of radial side of hand
    • pain
    • parasthesisia that worsens at night
  48. What are causes of sciatica?
    injury to lumbar plexus, hip, or abdomen
  49. What are signs and symptoms of sciatica?
    • weakness in knee flexion
    • weak hip adduction
    • flail ankle
    • pain that goes down below knee into foot***
    • paresthesia
  50. What is the causes and signs and symptoms of peroneal nerve damage?
    • injury at fibular head
    • weakness of everters and DF
    • drop foot
  51. What are the causes and signs and symptoms of tibial nerve damage?
    • injury below the knee, diabetes***
    • weakness of PF
    • sensory loss to back of leg and sole of foot
    • pain
    • paresthesia
  52. What is tarsal tunnel syndome?
    caused by entrapment, which increases with flat feet and activity
  53. What is a sign and symptom of tarsal tunnel syndrome?
    • burning in sole of foot
    • only small diameter fibers can still send messages so perception of pain is a lot higher than it actually is
  54. What happens with diabetic neuropathy?
    • sensory fibers degenerate
    • injury occurs but the patient can't feel it so an ulcer develops
    • poor blood supply to the area of injury keeps it from healing
    • amputation may result
Author
BPT
ID
74343
Card Set
quiz #2- peripheral neuropathy
Description
neuropathies
Updated