Focal neurologic signs

Focal neurologic signs also known as focal neurological deficits or focal CNS signs are impairments of nerve, spinal cord, or brain function that affects a specific region of the body, e.g. weakness in the left arm, the right leg, paresis, or plegia.

Focal neurological deficits may be caused by a variety of medical conditions such as head trauma,[1] tumors or stroke; or by various diseases such as meningitis or encephalitis or as a side effect of certain medications such as those used in anesthesia.[2]

Frontal lobe signs

Frontal lobe signs usually involve the motor system, and may include many special types of deficit, depending on which part of the frontal lobe is affected:

Parietal lobe signs

Parietal lobe signs usually involve somatic sensation, and may include:

Temporal lobe signs

Temporal lobe signs usually involve auditory sensation and memory, and may include:

Occipital lobe signs

Occipital lobe signs usually involve visual sensation, and may include:

Limbic Signs

Damage to the Limbic System involves loss or damage to memory, and may include:

Cerebellar signs

Cerebellar signs usually involve balance and coordination, and may include:

Brainstem signs

Brainstem signs can involve a host of specific sensory and motor abnormalities, depending on which fiber tracts and cranial nerve nuclei are affected.

Spinal cord signs

Spinal cord signs generally involve unilateral paralysis with contralateral loss of pain sensation

References

  1. Thiruppathy SP, Muthukumar N.Acta Mild head injury: revisited. Neurochir (Wien). 2004 Oct;146(10):1075-82; discussion 1082-3. PMID 15744844
  2. Thal GD, Szabo MD, Lopez-Bresnahan M, Crosby G. Exacerbation or unmasking of focal neurologic deficits by sedatives. Anesthesiology. 1996 Jul;85(1):21-5; discussion 29A-30A. PMID 8694368

Essentials of Kumar and Clark's Clinical Medicine, 5th Edition. Saunders Elsevier, UK. 2012. page 725

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, September 11, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.