Term
What does the central sulcus divide the brain into? |
|
Definition
The post-central gyrus and the pre-central gyrus |
|
|
Term
In a stroke, what is the term for the area of the brain that is dead? What is the term for the area of the brain that is dying/injured? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Is the primary motor cortex pre central or post central? The primary somatosensory cortex? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are two other names for the lateral sulcus? |
|
Definition
lateral fissure and sylvian fissure |
|
|
Term
Are Broca's and Wernicke's area on the left or right side of the brain? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What does a homunculus show? |
|
Definition
The area of the motor and sensory cortex that sends signals to certain areas of the body |
|
|
Term
Give an example, using dopamine, of how one NT can be both inhibitory and excitatory |
|
Definition
-Too much dopamine= schizophrenia -Too little dopamine= parkinson's |
|
|
Term
What are the top 3 killers in the USA? |
|
Definition
1. MI 2. Colorectal cancer 3. Stroke |
|
|
Term
Most strokes involve what main cerebral artery? |
|
Definition
The middle cerebral artery |
|
|
Term
Name 3 patients adenosine is given to |
|
Definition
-MI -a-fib -infants who are hypoxic to improve cerebral circulation |
|
|
Term
What do the deep branches of the medial cerebral artery supply? |
|
Definition
The basal ganglia (parkinson's and huntington's disease associated with the BG) |
|
|
Term
The medial cerebral artery inferior division supplies what part of the homunculus? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Name 5 consequences of a LEFT middle cerebral stem infarct |
|
Definition
-right hemiplegia (paralysis) -right hemianesthesia (loss of sensation) -right homonymous (ipsilateral) hemianopsia -left gaze preference -GLOBAL APHASIA |
|
|
Term
Name 5 consequences of a right middle cerebral stem infarct |
|
Definition
-L hemiplegia -L hemianesthesia -L homonymous hemianopsia -RIGHT gaze preference -Left hemineglect (won't pay attention to stimuli from the L) |
|
|
Term
Name the 3 types of aphasia with lost repetition and their respective areas of the brain |
|
Definition
-Expressive (Broca's aphasia) -Receptive (Wernicke's aphasia) -Conductive (lesion separates receptive area from motor area) |
|
|
Term
Name the 2 types of apashia with preserved repetition (trans-cortical aphasias) |
|
Definition
-isolation syndromes (destruction of border zones between ACA, MCA, and PCA, isolating the motor and receptive language areas from the rest of the cortex of the same hemisphere) -partial isolation syndromes |
|
|
Term
What is the position of Broca's area with respect to the lateral sulcus? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Effortful sparse speech, no prosody (rhythm, stress, intonation), mostly nouns and verbs, no prepositions articles or conjunctions, occurring with right hemiparesis is characteristic of which type of aphasia? |
|
Definition
expressive aphasia--Broca's |
|
|
Term
Describe the position of Wernicke's area with respect to the later sulcus |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Impaired comprehension, fluent speech, unaware of deficit, speech devoid of meaning, paraphasias (malformed inappropriate words), literal paraphasias (grass is greel), and neologism (grass is grumps) is characteristic of which type of aphasia? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Broca's and Wernicke's area have ________ connections |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is conductive aphasia? |
|
Definition
When the reciprocal connections between Broca's and Wernicke's is screwed up |
|
|
Term
Lesion separating receptive from motor area, severely affected repetition, fluent speech with paraphasias, and relatively preserved comprehension is characteristic of which type of aphasia? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Speech areas cut off from the rest of the hemisphere, repetition remarkably preserved, inability to comprehend, read, or write, fluent paraphasic speech is characteristic of which type of aphasia? |
|
Definition
Isolation syndromes-- transcortical aphasia |
|
|
Term
Name 2 consequences of an anterior cerebral artery infarct |
|
Definition
Contralateral lower extremity: -sensory loss -weakness |
|
|
Term
What are the consequences of a bilateral cerebral artery infarct? how about right and left? |
|
Definition
-bilateral= cortical blindess -Right and left= CONTRAlateral homonymous hemianopia |
|
|
Term
The PCA involves the _________ lobe, which is why cortical blindness is a consequence of a PCA infarct |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is a watershed infarct? |
|
Definition
Deficient blood supply to two adjacent arteries leads to the region BETWEEN the two vessels (watershed zones) being the most susceptible to ischemia |
|
|
Term
What does a drop in systemic BP mean in relation to watershed infarcts? |
|
Definition
bilateral watershed infarcts in two watershed zones ACA-MCA and MCA-PCA watershed zones |
|
|
Term
An occlusion of ICA leads to what kind of watershed infarct? |
|
Definition
ACA-MCA watershed zone infarct |
|
|
Term
What is man in a barrel syndrome? |
|
Definition
a patient who has disproportionate weakness of both arms while maintaining mobility of face and lower limbs. |
|
|
Term
what causes man in a barrel syndrome? |
|
Definition
watershed infarcts that effect bilateral supratentorial brain lesions of the prerolandic area |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
a cerebrovascular disease producing temporary brain ischemia |
|
|
Term
What is the mechanism of a TIA? |
|
Definition
temporary narrowing of a vessel followed by return of blood flow before permanent damage occurs |
|
|
Term
What are three causes of TIA? |
|
Definition
-thrombus formation on vessel wall -embolism occluding vessel but then dissolving -vasospasm |
|
|
Term
What is the time frame for the neurologic deficits of a TIA? |
|
Definition
<24 hours, but typically 10 mins |
|
|
Term
Would a hemorrhage ever cause a TIA? |
|
Definition
no, that would be a stroke |
|
|
Term
What are two clues to figure a TIA was the cause of transient neurologic deficits? |
|
Definition
-typical vascular pattern (as in MCA, ACA, PCA) -positive for stroke risk factors |
|
|
Term
What are 4 things that could cause a transient loss of consciousness without other focal features? |
|
Definition
-basilar artery TIA -seizure -orthostasis (postural hypotension) -Cardiogenic syncope (vasovagal or arryhthmia) |
|
|
Term
What are 3 causes of ischemic stroke? |
|
Definition
-vasospasm -thrombotic infarct -embolic infarct |
|
|
Term
What are three sources of thrombotic material that could lead to embolic infarcts? |
|
Definition
-cardioembolic -artery to arterty -dissection of carotid or vertebral-->thrombus-->embolizes |
|
|
Term
How does a patent foramen ovale contribute to ischemic strokes? |
|
Definition
allows a venous thromboembolism to bypass the lungs and pass directly from right to left heart and then to brain |
|
|
Term
what are the two special tests used to diagnose a patent foramen oval? |
|
Definition
-TCD -TEE (transesophageal echocardiogram) |
|
|
Term
How can an ischemic stroke be classified by size of vessel? |
|
Definition
Large vessel infarct= MCA, PCA, ACA Small= small penetrating vessels that supply deep structures (LACUNAR because they resemble small lakes or cavities pathologically) |
|
|
Term
Lacunar infarcts are usually associated with small vessel diseased by ____________ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are 4 reasons the vessel in a lacunar infarct could become occluded |
|
Definition
-lipohyalinosis -atherosclerosis -thrombus -small embolus |
|
|
Term
A lacunar stroke that caused ataxic hemiparesis would cause damage to what brain structure? |
|
Definition
damage to proprioceptive or cerebellar circuitry rather than the cerebellum |
|
|
Term
What would a thalamic lacunar infarct cause? |
|
Definition
contralateral somatosensroy deficits with or without thalamic pain syndrome |
|
|
Term
What would a basal ganglia lacunar infarct cause |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Seizures occur in ______% of stroke patients |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Atherosclerotic disease commonly leads to _______ of the ICA just beyond the carotid bifurcation |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are three branches that the thrombi formed in the ICA especially embolize to? |
|
Definition
-MCA -ACA -opthalmic artery (w/ monocular visual loss) |
|
|
Term
An occlusion of the ICA could be asymptomatic due to good collateral flow via the _________ and/or_________ |
|
Definition
-anterior communicating artery -posterior communicating artery |
|
|
Term
What is carotid endarterectomy? |
|
Definition
atheromatous material is shelled out from the internal carotid artery |
|
|
Term
What is an example of an anticoagulant drug? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What can cause a carotid or vertebral dissection? |
|
Definition
trauma, cough, sneeze, etc causes tear in the layer of the artery. blood burrows in and a vessel protrudes into the lumen. stenosis with reduced flow or a thrombus is formed which can embolize |
|
|