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Cranial Nerves. PULSE: Preparation for Finals Tutor name. TuBS attendance. https://tutorialbooking.com/. Session overview. Common cranial nerve conditions for the OSCE How to present your findings Summary of clinical signs Case presentations and viva questions.
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Cranial Nerves PULSE: Preparation for Finals Tutor name
TuBS attendance • https://tutorialbooking.com/
Session overview • Common cranial nerve conditions for the OSCE • How to present your findings • Summary of clinical signs • Case presentations and viva questions
What is the purpose of an OSCE? “This station tests a student’s ability to perform an appropriate focussed physical examination, demonstrating consideration for the patient, and to report back succinctly describing the relevant findings. It also tests a student’s clinical judgement i.e. the ability to decide the differential diagnosis, choose investigations and formulate a management plan.”
Common cranial nerve conditions in the OSCE • It is highly unlikely you will be asked to examine ALL cranial nerves • Ophthalmoplegia • Field defects • Facial nerve palsy
Presenting your findings • What were you asked to do? • What were your key positive findings? • What were the important negative findings? • What does this mean? • How would you complete your examination, and what investigations would you do?
Example case presentation • I was asked to examine the cranial nerves of this elderly gentleman • On examination I found that he had a failure of lateral gaze in the left eye • All other eye movements were intact, visual acuity was normal, and there were no visual field defects • No abnormalities in the other cranial nerves were detected • This would be consistent with a diagnosis of a 6th nerve palsy • To complete my examination I would like to perform fundoscopy and do a full neurological examination of the limbs – FURTHER TESTS
Completing your examination • Complete cranial nerves examination • Formal tests • 1: scents • 2: Snellen and Ischiara charts • 3, 4, 6: fundoscopy, corneal reflex • 7: jaw jerk • 9: gag reflex • Perform fundoscopy • Full neurological examination of the limbs
Investigations • Bloods; FBC, U&E, LFTs, glucose, B12/folate • Imaging; CXR (paraneoplastic/ Horners), CT, MRI (posterior lesions, cord) • LP; cells, oligoclonal bands, xanthochromia • Other; nerve conduction studies
Oculomotor nerve palsy CN III • Down and out • Ptosis • Fixed dilated pupil • Causes • - vasculitic (DM, HTN) • - aneurysm (PCAA) • Medical vs surgical • Medical: DM: pupil sparing • Surgical: fixed, dilated pupil • Parasympathetic fibres run along the periphery and are the first to be affected by compression
Trochlear Cranial Nerve Palsy CN IV • Superior oblique • Head tilt • Vertical diplopia • Causes • - vasculopathic • - tumour • - congenital • - trauma
Abducens Palsy: CN VI • Unopposed action of medial rectus • Causes • Vasculopathic (DM, HTN) • Tumour • Intracranial pressure: false localising sign
Examination of CN I-III • WINDEC • STAND BACK: observe +closely at eyes • CN I • CN II • CN III
Case 1 – CN I - III • Normal smell • Normal fields • Also impaired looking to far left – left eye essentially fixed, bulging from socket • Pupils non reactive to light
Case 1 – CN V onwards • Sensation – decreased in upper and mid face, normal in beard region • Facial movements otherwise normal • Tongue movements normal and symmetrical • Hearing intact. Renne +ve; Weber NAD • Normal cough and speech • No neck wasting or weakness Please present your findings.
Case 2 - eyes • PERLA • Eye movements normal (?small amount of nystagmus) • Normal visual fields • Sensation reduced on right throughout
Case 2 – CN V onwards • Reduced facial movements on right, including right forehead • Partially deaf on right side – Rinne’s – air louder, Weber’s – left louder • Normal cough and voice • Tongue movements normal • No neck muscle wasting, no weakness • Bonus points – on walking, he falls to the right • Bonus bonus – past pointing Please present your findings.
Case 3 Please present your findings.
What is Horner’s syndrome? • Horner’s Syndrome • = collection of signs: • unilateral pupillary constriction (miosis), • ptosis and • anhydrosis (i.e. loss of sympathetic pathway on that side).
What are the causes of Horner’s syndrome? • Sympathetic chain in neck • Post thyroid/laryngeal surgery • Malignancy, e.g. thyroid; neoplastic infiltration • Cervical sympathectomy • Carotid artery • Occlusion/dissection • Pericarotid tumours (Raeder’s syndrome) • Cluster headache • Miscellaneous • Congenital • Migrainous neuralgia (usually transient) • Isolated and unknown cause • Hemisphere and brainstem • Massive cerebral infarction • Pontine glioma • Vascular disease (esp. lateral medullary syndrome – infarction of lateral medulla, due to occlusion of vertebral artery, posterior inferior cerebellar artery, superior, middle or inferior medullary arteries) • ‘Coning’ of the temporal lobe • Cervical cord • Syringomyelia • Cord tumours • T1 root • Apical bronchial neoplasm (usually SCC) • Apical TBCervical rib • Brachial plexus trauma or tumour
Groups of nerve palsies • III and IV – midbrain nuclei • V, VI, VII, VIII – pons nuclei • IX, X, XI, XII – medulla nuclei • Unilateral III, IV, VI, Va – cavernous sinus lesion; superior orbital fissure lesion (Tolosa-Hunt syndrome) • Unilateral V, (VI), VII, VIII, (IX) – cerebellopontine angle lesion (usually tumour) • Unilateral IX, X, XI – jugular foramen lesion • Eye and facial muscles, worse on exertion – myasthenia gravis • UMN IX, X, XII – pseudobulbar palsy • LMN IX, X, XII – bulbar palsy
Summary • Common cranial nerve conditions for the OSCE • How to present your findings • Summary of clinical signs • Case presentations and viva questions
Please complete TuBS feedback • Tutor details • For more information on Examining for Finals sessions: • examiningforfinals@gmail.com • www.sefce.net/pulse • Resource Updated 2017: Dr A Swan • With thanks to previous contributors: • Dr Emma Claire Phillips (FY2) • Dr Kristina Lee (FY2)