24 September 2009

Cranial Nerve Diseases



Cranial Nerve Diseases

Cranial Nerve Disorders??
Types of Cranial Diseases
* Bell’s Palsy
* Trigeminal Neuralgia
* Conjugate Gaze Palsies
* Glossopharyngeal Neuralgia
* Hemifacial Spasm
* Hypoglossal Nerve Disorder
* Internuclear Ophthalmoplegia
* Palsies of cranial nerve that controls eye movements
* Acoustic Neuroma
* Facial Nerve
* Meniere’ Disease
* Vertigo and Dizziness
Bell Palsy
WHAT IS BELL’S PALSY?
Causes Of Bell’s Palsy
Prevalence of Bell’s Palsy
Symptoms of Bell’s Palsy
--Symptoms usually start suddenly, and range from mild to severe. They may include:

* Twitching in face
* Weakness in face
* Face feels stiff or pulled to one side
* Droopy eyelid or corner of mouth
* Drooling due to inability to control facial muscles
* Facial Paralysis of one side of the face, makes it hard to close one eye
* Change in facial expression (for example, grimacing)
* Dry eye or mouth
* Loss of sense of taste
* Difficulty with eating and drinking
* Pain behind or in front of the ear, may occur 1-2 days before muscle weakness
* Sensitivity to sound (hyperacusis) on the side of the face affected
* Headache
--These symptoms of Bell's palsy usually begin suddenly and reach their peak within 48 hours

Treatment for Bell’s palsy
* SAD NEWS!! There is no cure or normal course of treatment for Bell's palsy. The most important factor in treatment is to remove the source of the nerve damage. Some cases are gentle and do not require treatment since the symptoms usually drop on their own within 2 weeks. For some patients, treatment may include medications such as acyclovir -- used to fight viral infections -- combined with an anti-inflammatory drug such as the steroid prednisone -- used to reduce inflammation and swelling. Medications such as aspirin, acetaminophen, or ibuprofen may relieve pain, but because of possible drug interactions, patients should always talk to their doctors before taking any medications. There is a decompression surgery for Bell's palsy -- to relieve pressure on the nerve, but it is controversial and is rarely suggested.
* GOOD NEWS!! In general, the prognosis (forecast) for individuals with Bell's palsy is very good. The degree of nerve damage determines the degree of recovery. With or without treatment, most individuals begin to heal within 2 weeks after the early onset of symptoms and recuperate entirely within 3 to 6 months.

Prevention for Bell’s Palsy
* Taking Care of Yourself!!
* Use of safety measures may reduce the incidence of head injury.
* AVOID HITTING YOUR HEAD ON THE WALL !!
* Many of the other factors associated with this disorder are not readily preventable.


FAQs on Bell’s Palsy

Cranial Nerve Diseases.ppt

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Multiple Sclerosis -Diagnostic Issues



Multiple Sclerosis -Diagnostic Issues
By:Christopher Bourque

* Manifestations due to CNS
o Slowing or failure of transmission
+ Inflammatory demyelination
+ Axonal damage
o Mostly damage of white matter tracts
+ Optic neuritis, weakness, sensory loss, ataxia nystagmus, bladder dysfunction, cognitive impairment
* Diagnosis based on clinical and laboratory evidence of
+ Dissemination in time
+ Dissemination in space
Patterns of MS
* Relapsing - remitting
o Attacks with complete/incomplete recovery
o Stable between attacks
* Secondary - progressive
o Initially relapsing-remitting
o Then progression +/- attacks
* Progressive - relapsing
o Initial gradual detioriation
o Subsequent episodes
* Primary progressive
o Gradual decline
o No attacks


Schumacher Clinical Criteria MS Diagnosis 1965
* Age (onset 10-50 years)
* CNS white matter disease
* Lesions disseminated in time and space
* Objective abnormalities on exam
* Consistent time course
o Attacks lasting > 24 hrs., spaced at least 1 month apart
o Slow or stepwise progression for > 6 months
* No better explanation
* Diagnosis by experienced clinician

Poser Criteria for the Diagnosis of MS 1983
* Widely used for last 20 years
* Definite or probable
* Laboratory supported MS
* Replaced by McDonald criteria 2001
o Technical advances enable quicker dx.
o Controversial
Additional Requirements to Make Diagnosis
Objective Lesions
Clinical (attacks)
McDonald Criteria
Positive CSFand
Dissemination in space by MRI evidence of 9 or more T2 brain lesions or 2 or more cord lesions or 4-8 brain and 1 cord lesion or positive VEP with 4-8 MRI lesions or positive VEP with less than 4 brain lesions plus 1 cord lesion and Dissemination in time by MRI or continued progression for 1 year

Clinical Manifestations
* Demographic
o Female
+ Women make up to 70%-75% MS patients
o Young age
+ Onset before age 16: 5% of cases
+ Peak onset post puberty, early 20’s
# Relapsing MS 28-30 years
* Symptoms
o Recent onset
o Frequently progressive
+ Coming on over 1-several days
+ Very acute symptoms possible
The MS Event
* Attack/relapse/exacerbation
o Acute episode of CNS dysfunction
o Lasting at least 24 hours
o In absence of fever or metabolic derangement
o All events within 30 days are unitary

MS Symptoms
* Motor
o Weakness, spasticity, ataxia
o Rarely radicular
+ lesion ant. horn, root entry zone
+ painful
+ atrophy
* Somatosensory
o 1st sx. in 43% patients
+ Includes visual
o Any anatomic distribution
o Any combination
+ Loss pain, temp, light touch, vbn, position
o Positive sx. common
+ Paresthesiae, hyperpathia, allodynia, dysesthesias
Nonspecific Associated Features That Suggest MS
* Excessive unexplained fatigue
* Temperature sensitivity
o Hot, humid weather
* Relatively recent symptoms
* History of Lhermitte’s sign
* History of bandlike sensation around the waist
* Uhthoff’s phenomenon
o eg, blurry vision with exercise or heat exposure * Fatigue
o One of the most important causes of disability
o Several sources
+ Handicap fatigue
# Increased effort to perform routine tasks
+ Secondary fatigue
# Depression, sleep disturbances, medication side-effects, other conditions
+ Systemic fatigue
# Chronic lack of energy, tirdness, malaise
# Etiology unknown

* Cognitive Disturbances
o Common, frequently overlooked
+ Estimated 50-75%
o Most common
+ Impaired attention, slow info processing, short term memory loss, reduced visuospatial skills, impaired executive function
o Impaired driving skills
o Important impact QoL, ADL
o Can occur independent
+ of disease course
+ other manifestations
MRI in MS
* Brain lesions
o Character
o Location
Evoked Potentials
* Visual evoked potentials
Principal Differential Diagnosis of Multiple Sclerosis

* Infection
* Inflammatory
* Metabolic
* Neoplastic
* Spine disease
Cerebrospinal Fluid
* Useful, not diagnostic
o Other conditions
+ Chronic CNS infections, viral syndromes, neuropathies
* Immunoglobulin abnormalities
o Production of immunoglobulin
# By plasma or B cells in CNS
+ Oligoclonal bands of immunoglobulin (IgG) (OCB)
# In CSF, not serum
# Isoelectric focusing technique
+ Elevated IgG index
# Ratio of IgG/protein in serum and CSF
# index = (csf IgG/csf albumin)
(serum IgG/serum albumin)

* First event - chance of progression to MS
o In 3 years
+ OCB +ve: 25%
+ OCB -ve: 9%
* CIS:clinically isolated syndrome
o 62.5% cases +ve OCB
* Clinically definite MS
o 90% +OCB
MRI in MS

* Spinal cord lesions
o Character
+ Asymptomatic lesions
+ Focal T2/proton density hyperintense lesions
+ Diffuse proton density abnormalities
+ Atrophy
+ Asymmetric involvement
# Multiple scattered lesions
+ Edema with acute plaques
# Often enhancing
o Location
+ Cervical and thoracic
# Especially midcervical
+ Peripheral
+ Less than 2 vertebral segments
+ Less than 50% cross-sectional area
+ Lateral, dorsal cord
Paroxysmal Symptoms in MS
* Trigeminal neuralgia (and others)
* Tonic “seizures”
* Paroxysmal dysarthria
* Hemifacial spasm
* Paroxysmal itching
* Abrupt loss of muscle tone
* Paroxysmal aphasia
* Paroxysmal kinesogenic choreoathetosis
* Lhermitte’s sign
* Visual symptoms, afferent
o Almost any pattern, related to location
o Optic neuritis
+ Central scotoma
# Mild: color desaturation
# Severe: blindness
* Vast majority have excellent return by 6 months
+ Frequent pain
# Worse on eye movement
Optic Neuritis Risk of Subsequent MS
* Other Brain Stem Structures
o Facial weakness
o Vertigo
o Loss of hearing, taste
o Dysarthria, dysphagia
+ Bulbar muscles
# Weakness, ataxia, spasticity
* Psychiatric Disturbances
o Depression
o Emotional incontinence
* Bladder dysfunction; the importance of urodynamic studies
o Failure to store: detruser hyperactivity
+ Urgency, frequency, nocturia
o Failure to empty
+ Detruser-sphincter dyssynergia
+ Poor detruser contraction
# Hesitancy, increased residual vol., retention
o Both
+ Combined
# detruser hyperactivity
# detruser-sphincter dyssynergia
o Incontinence
+ Detruser hyperactivity or
+ Overflow
+ Symptoms may not be accurate indicator of urodynamic pathology
* Bowel dysfunction
* Sexual dysfunction
o Erectile dysfunction
o Women: loss of libido, anorgasmia
o Both sexes
+ Loss of perineal sensation
+ Neuropathic pain
+ Spasticity
+ Incontinence
+ Depression, fatigue

Pain Syndromes in MS
* Primary pain
o Neuralgic
+ Trigeminal neuralgia
+ Other neuralgias
o Dysesthetic pain
+ Most often burning (legs)
+ Other dysesthesias
o Radicular pain
o Tonic seizures
o Spasticity
+ Flexor spasms
+ Extensor spasms
* Secondary pain
o Low back pain
o Osteoporosis with fractures
Neurologic Syndromes Likely for MS
* Optic neuritis
+ Unilateral eye involvement
+ Retrobulbar rather than papillitis
+ Eye pain
+ Partial vision loss, with at least some recovery
+ No retinal exudates, disc hemorrhages, macular star
o 10 years follow-up: 38% develop MS
+ MRI other lesions: risk 56%
+ MRI normal: risk 22%
o 20 years follow-up: 70% develop MS
* Transverse Myelitis
+ Incomplete
+ Sensory > motor
+ Associated
# Lhermitte’s sign
# Bandlike abdominal or chest pressure
* Internuclear Ophthalmoplegia
* Trigeminal Neuralgia
* Hemifacial Spasm
* Paroxysmal symptoms
+ Last seconds to minutes
+ Occur multiple times daily
o Tonic spasms
o Dysarthria, ataxia
o Hemiparesis, hypesthesia
Clues to a Misdiagnosis; MS
o Examination
+ Prominent
# fever, headache, uveitis, pain
+ Abrupt
# hemiparesis, hearing loss
+ No
# optic nerve/ocular involvement
# bowel/bladder involvement
+ Progressive myelopathy
# Without bowel/bladder involvement
+ Impaired level of consciousness
+ Nonscotomatous visual field defects
+ Grey matter features
# Early dementia, aphasia
# Fasciculations
# Extrapyramidal features
o MRI
+ Brain
# Normal
# Small lesions < 3 mm.
# Subcortical location (internal capsule)
# Prominent infratentorial involvement
# Prominent grey matter involvement (basal ganglia)
# Symmetric, confluent hemispheric white matter involvement
# Hydrocephalus
# Severe cerebellar/brain stem atrophy
# No callosal/periventricular lesions
* Manifestations due to CNS
o Slowing or failure of transmission
o Mostly damage of white matter tracts
o Recent appreciation of axonal/grey matter involvement
* Diagnosis based on clinical and laboratory evidence of
o Dissemination in time
o Dissemination in space
o Recent appreciation of role of MRI in assisting diagnosis
* In-office pattern recognition
o Appropriate demographic
o Appropriate clinical event

Multiple Sclerosis Diagnostic Issues.ppt

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Clinical outcome Measures, Trials



Clinical outcome Measures, Trials
By:Professor and Acting Chair of Neurology
Director, MS Comprehensive Care Center
SUNY at Stony Brook, New York


MS: Diagnostic Issues
* Diagnostic principles
* Misdiagnosis clues
* Differential diagnosis
* Case presentations

Diagnosis Of MS
Diagnosis Based On Schumacher Criteria
* Appropriate age (10-50 years)
* CNS white matter disease
* Lesions disseminated in time and space
* Objective abnormalities
* Consistent time course
* No better explanation
* Diagnosis by a competent clinician
(preferably neurologist)

MRI Dissemination In Space
MRI Dissemination In Time
Diagnostic Criteria
Diagnostic Criteria For Primary Progressive MS
Diagnosis Of MS: MRI
MRI Features Suggestive of MS
Diagnosis Of MS: CSF
Diagnosis Of MS: Blood And Ancillary Tests
Diagnosis Of MS: Evoked Potentials
Misdiagnosis of MS
* Clinical
* Neuroimaging
* Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)

Clinical Clues
* Normal examination
* No dissemination over time and
space
* Onset before age 10 or after age 55
* Genetic "red flag”
+ positive family history
+ early age onset
+ unexplained non CNS disease
* Progressive course starting before age 35
* Localized disease
* Atypical features
+ prominent fever
+ prominent headache
+ abrupt hemiparesis
+ abrupt hearing loss
+ prominent pain (except trigeminal
neuralgia)
+ no optic nerve or ocular motility
disturbance
+ normal sensory and bladder function
+ progressive myelopathy without
bladder /bowel involvement
+ impaired level of consciousness
+ prominent uveitis
+ peripheral neuropathy
+ nonscotomatous field defects
+ gray matter features (prominent
early dementia, seizures, aphasia,
fasciculations, extrapyramidal
features)

Neuroimaging Clues
Brain
* Normal brain MRI
* Small lesions (< 3mm)
* Subcortical lesions (internal
capsule)
* Predominant infratentorial
involvement
* Prominent GM involvement (basal
ganglia)
Neuroimaging Clues
Brain
* Symmetric, confluent hemispheric
WM involvement
* Significant mass effect
* Hydrocephalus
* Severe cerebellar/ brainstem atrophy
* Absence of callosal or periventricular
lesions

Neuroimaging Clues
Spinal cord
* Lesion > 2 vertebral segments
* Severe swelling
* Full thickness lesions
CSF Clues
* Normal CSF
* Disappearance of oligoclonal bands;
normalization of intrathecal IgG production
* Cell count > 50 WBC /mm3
* Protein > 100 mg/dl

Differential Diagnosis of MS
* Genetic
* Infectious
* Inflammatory
* Metabolic
* Miscellaneous
* Neoplastic
* Psychiatric
* Structural
* Toxic
* Vascular
* Variants

Acute Leukoencephalopathy
Feature Disorders
Cranial neuropathies - Lyme disease, Sarcoidosis
Cortical blindness - multiple infarcts, PML,
Hearing loss - Cogan’s, Susac
Intracranial - hemorrhagic infarction, tumor,
hemorrhage venous infarction
Acute Leukoencephalopathy
Feature Disorders
Lockedin syndrome - CPM, infarction
Migraine - antiphospholipid syndrome,CADASIL, mitochondrial encephalopathy
Muscular rigidity - paraneoplastic brainstem encephalitis
Myoclonus - antiamphiphysin paraneoplastic syndrome, hashimoto’s
Papilledema - Gliomatosis, venous sinus thrombosis
Differential Diagnosis:
Variants
* Balo's concentric sclerosis
* Disseminated subpial demyelination
* Neuromyelitis optica (Devic's disease)
* Marburg variant
* Tumefactive MS
* Myelinoclastic diffuse sclerosis
(Schilder disease)
* Postinfectious encephalomyelitis
* Clinically isolated syndromes

CIS Issues
CIS Controversies
* What features define first attack MS
* What features predict subsequent course
* Who should be offered MS DMT

CIS Considerations
* Appropriate age
o excludes too young and too old
* Characteristic syndrome
* Other causes excluded
* Abnormal brain MRI
o with suggestive features
MS CIS Syndromes
* typically unilateral
* retrobulbar
* typically painful
* some recovery expected
* no retinal exudates or

Optic neuritis
MS CIS Syndromes
Myelitis
MS CIS Syndromes
MRI Dissemination in Space*
MRI Dissemination In Time
Diagnostic Criteria
CIS and MRI Predictors*
Role Of MRI In Suspected MS*
MS Differential Diagnosis
* Migraine
* Sarcoid
* Sjögren syndrome
* Stroke and ischemic
* Unidentified bright objects on MRI
* Vascular malformations
* Vasculitis (primary CNS or other)
* Vitamin deficiency (B12, E)
* Number and volume of brain MRI
CIS and Therapy
CIS: Conclusions
Cognitive Impairment In Minimal Disability MS*
Diagnostic Criteria For Primary Progressive MS
Neuromyelitis Optica (NMO)
NMO Differential
NMO: Clinical Features
Recent Pediatric Series ..........

Clinical outcome Measures, Trials.ppt

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