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Published byMarilyn Norman Modified over 8 years ago
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CNS - History taking
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Objectives Where is the lesion? What is the pathology –inflammatory/vascular/tumor/infection Is it a CNS manifestation of a systemic disease?
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Basic information Age –vascular / inherited / inflammatory Handedness –Left hemisphere dominant in almost all righthanded and 3/4 of lefthanded Chief complaints –Headache / Loss of consciousness / falls
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Headache Most common symptom Ask (SOCRATES) –Site –Onset –Character –Radiation –Associated symptoms –Timing –Exacerbating/Relieving factors –Severity
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Migraine –Episodic & severe - –with or without aura –unilateral or bilateral –throbbing or pounding –a/w nausea, vomiting, photo/phono phobia –lasts less than 24 hours
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Onset & course Acute single episode –SAH, acute meningitis Acute recurrent –Migraine, cluster h, neuralgia, sinusitis Subacute single episode –Infectious, raised ICT, Temporal arteritis Chronic –C. spondylosis, depression
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Subarachnoid hemorrhage Headache maximal at onset a/w loss of consciousness, seizures, photophobia, vomiting, neck stiffness
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Meningitis/Encephalitis Less abrupt onset a/w fever, rash, photophobia, neck stiffness
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Raised Intracranial pressure Poorly localized headache worse on waking up aggravated by stooping, coughing, straining
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Neuralgia focal, knife like or burning pain recurrent paroxysms lasting seconds precipitated by activities such talking brushing teeth, shaving or eating
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Temporal arteritis New onset headache in patients over 55 years. Tenderness over the temporal arteries
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Loss of consiousness Syncope Seizures Dizziness/vertigo
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Take history from the witness Where did the attacks take place Triggers, warning signs, Duration/frequency of attacks
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Syncope Loss of consciousness due to inadequate cerebral perfusion Vasovagal syncope most common –pain, emotion, sight/thought Presyncope –lightheaded, tinnitus, nausea, feels faint Syncope during exercise suggests cardiac cause
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Seizures Generalized or focal loss of consciousness Simple focal or complex focal Witness to seizure
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Generalized seizure Prodrome - change of mood/aura Tonic –LOC, spasm, cyanosis, fall Clonic –jerking of limbs, tongue biting Postictal –flaccidity, confusion, headache, amnesia
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Syncope vs seizure seizure –no warning –while lying flat –synchronized rhythmic jerking –cyanosis (pallor in syncope) –tongue biting –confusion & amnesion - post-event
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Dizziness & vertigo Vertigo - illusion of movement –vestibular or brain lesions Dizziness - common in the elderly –postural hypotension –cerebrovascular disease, verterbrobasillar insufficiency –arrhythmia –hyperventilation
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Vertigo migraine brainstem infarct multiple sclerosis meniere's Benign paroxysmal vertigo trauma drugs
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Falls Accidental acute illness loss of consciousness multiple risk factors –disease: CVD, Alzheimer, Parkinson –disability: impaired balance/vision/gait –drugs
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Nature & location of symptoms understand what the patient says - terms used by patient may be ambiguous
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Witness When patient is unconscious or has cognitive disturbance
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Time relationship When did the symptoms start constant or intermittent duration, if intermittent do they get better or worse was onset sudden or gradual
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Precipitating, exacerbating or relieving factors Associated symptoms
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Past history Past history - epilepsy risk factors for vascular disease –other sites, HTN, smoking, Family H
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Drug history recent drug history drugs –anticonvulsants, sedatives, b-blockers
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Family history genetic - cerebellar ataxia, huntington multifactorial - migraine, MS
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Social history Alcohol - ataxia, seizures, peripheral neuropathy Smoking - malignancy, stroke drugs of abuse - seizures, strokes HIV - CNS symptoms
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