Neurological Assessment
Neurological Assessment
Position or
Temperature kinesthetic
Touch Pain sensation Vibration
sensation sensation (propriocep
tion)
TOUCH SENSATION
• Tactile sensation is assessed by lightly touching a cotton
wisp or fingertip to corresponding areas on each side
of the body. The sensitivity of proximal parts of the
extremities is compared with that of distal parts, and
the right and left sides are compared.
PAIN AND TEMPERATURE SENSATION
• Determining the patient’s sensitivity to a sharp object can assess
superficial pain perception.
• The patient is asked to differentiate between the sharp and dull ends of a
broken wooden cotton swab or tongue blade; using a safety pin is
inadvisable because it breaks the integrity of the skin.
• Both the sharp and dull sides of the object are applied with equal
intensity at all times, and the two sides are compared.
• Use the hot and cold object for skin to determine the hot and cold
sensation.
VIBRATION AND PROPRIOCEPTION
• The handle of the vibrating fork is placed against a bony prominence,
and the patient is asked if he or she feels a sensation and is instructed
to signal the examiner when the sensation ceases.
• Common locations used to test for vibratory sense include the distal
joint of the great toe and the proximal thumb joint.
• If the patient does not perceive the vibrations at the distal bony
prominences, the examiner progresses upward with the tuning fork
until the patient perceives the vibrations.
• As with all measurements of sensation, a side-to-side
comparison is made.
POSITION AND PROPRIOCEPTION
It is determined by asking the patient to close
both eyes and indicate, as the great toe or index
finger is alternately moved up and down, in
which direction movement has taken place.
Vibration and position sense are often lost
together, frequently in circumstances in which
all other sensation remains intact.
DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES
CT SCAN :
• Computed tomography (CT) scan is a structural
imaging study that uses a computer-based X-ray to
provide a cross-sectional image of the brain.
• A computer calculates differences in tissue absorption
of the X- ray beams. The CT produces a three
dimensional view of structures in the brain and
distinguishes between soft tissues and water. I.V.
contrast dye may be used to examine the integrity of
the blood – brain barrier.
• CT is primarily used to detect tumors and
inflammatory disorders. Spinal CT scan may be used
to evaluate lower back pain due to herniated
intervertebral disk or other spinal lesions.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
• Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses computer
generated radio waves and a powerful magnetic field
to produce detailed images of body structures
including tissues, organs, bones, and nerves.
• Neurological uses include the diagnosis of brain and
spinal cord tumors, eye disease, inflammation,
infection, and vascular irregularities that may lead to
stroke.
• MRI can also detect and monitor degenerative
disorders such as multiple sclerosis and can
document brain injury from trauma.
Single photon emission computed tomography
(SPECT),
• A nuclear imaging test involving blood flow to tissue, is
used to evaluate
certain brain functions.
• The test may be ordered as a follow-up to an MRI to
diagnose tumors, infections, degenerative spinal disease,
and stress fractures.
• As with a PET scan, a radioactive isotope, which binds to
chemicals that flow to the brain, is injected intravenously
into the body, Areas of increased blood flow will collect
more of the isotope.
• As the patient lies on a table, a gamma camera rotates
around the head and records where the radioisotope has
traveled.
• That information is converted by computer into cross-
sectional slices that are stacked to produce a detailed
three-dimensional image of blood flow and activity within
the brain. The test is performed at either an imaging
center or a hospital.
Angiography
• Angiography is a test used to detect blockages of the arteries or
veins.
• A cerebral angiogram can detect the degree of narrowing or
obstruction of artery or blood vessel in the brain, head, or
neck.
• It is used to diagnose stroke and to determine the location and
size of a brain tumor, aneurysm, or vascular malformation.
• This test is usually performed in a hospital outpatient setting and
takes up to 3 hours, followed by a 9- to 8- hour resting period.
• The patient, wearing a hospital or imaging gown, lies on a table
that is wheeled into the imaging area.
• While the patient is awake, a physician anesthetizes a small area
of the leg near the groin and then inserts a catheter into a major
artery located there.
Lumbar puncture
• Sampling of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) via lumbar
puncture is crucial for accurate diagnosis of
meningeal infections and carcinomatosis.
• CSF analysis is also helpful in evaluating patients
with central or peripheral nervous system
demyelinating disorder and with intracranial
hemorrhage particularly when imaging studies are
inconclusive.
Purpose
• To diagnose central nervous system infections,
subarachnoid hemorrhages, and many other
neurologic pathologies.
Equipment Needed
• Spinal or lumbar puncture tray (specifically the items listed below)
• Sterile gloves
• Manometer
• Three-way stopcock
• Sterile dressing
• Antiseptic solution with skin swabs
• sterile drape
• 1% Lidocaine
• 3-cc syringe
• 20 – and 25 gauge needle
• 20 – and 22 gauge spinal needle
• Four plastic test tubes, numbered 1 to 4, with caps.
Technique
• Obtain informed consent from the patient or next of kin.
• Obtain a CT scan of the head or perform a fundoscopic exam
to check for papilledema. It is absolutely necessary to rule out
increased intracranial pressure before proceeding.
• Locate the L3 – L4 space. To do this, find the iliac crests and
move your fingers medially from the crests to the spine.
• Mark the entry site with your thumbnail or a marker.
• Open and prepare the spinal tray in a sterile manner.
Complications
• Post- spinal puncture headache
• Brain herniation
• Bloody tap (may lead to hematoma)
• meningitis
Post-procedure care:
• Send the four tubes for the following labs:
a) Tube 1, bacteriology: Gram stain, culture and sensitivity, acid-
fast bacilli, fungal cultures and stains, cell count (compare with
tube 3 to differentiate traumatic tap from subrachnoid
hemorrhage).
b) Tube 2, biochemistry: glucose, protein, and electrophoresis (if
working up for multiple sclerosis to detect oligoclonal banding).
c) Tube 3, hematology: cell count with differential .
d) Tube 4, special studies if needed: VDRL (neurosyphilis), India
ilk (cryptococcus neoformans.)
Electroencephalgraphy (EEG)
• Eletroencephaloghaphy is the recording and
measurement of scalp potential in orders to evaluate
baseline brain funtioning as well as paroxysmal brain
electrical activity suggestive of a seizure disorder.
• An EEG is performed by securing 20 electrodes to scalp at
prodetrmined locations based on an international system
theta uses standardized percentage of the head
circumferences, the 10-20 .
•
• Each elector is labelled using a letter and a number, the letter
identifying the skull region (FP= Fronttopolar, F=frontal,
P=parietal, T=temporal, O=Occipital, V=vertex) and the number
the specific location, with odd numbers representing the left sided
electrodes.
Nerve Conduction Study (NCS)
• A Nerve conduction study is the recording the measuring of
the compound nerve and muscle action potentials elicited in
response to an electrical stimulus.
Repetitive stimulation study
• The repetitive stimulation study is a method of
measuring electrical conduction properties at the
neuromuscular junction. To perform a RSS a surface
recording electrode is placed over a muscle belly
and the nerve innervating that muscle is electrically
stimulated with a superamaximal stimulus at a
certain frequency.
Electromyography
• Electromyography is the
recording and study of
insertional, spontaneous and
voluntary electrical activity
of muscle. This test allows
one to physiologically
evaluate the motor unit,
including the anterior horn
cell, peripheral nerve and
muscle.
Evoked potentials
• Evoked potentials are ways of measuring conduction
velocities fro sensory pathways in the central nervous
system by means of computer averaging techniques. Three
types of evoked potentials are routinely performed; visual,
brain stem auditory, and somatosensory evoked responses.
1. Pattern reversals visual evoked responses(PVER)
2. Brain stem auditory evoked responses (BAER)