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1.The first step in treating patients with neurologic disease is to localize the lesion.
2.Myopathies cause proximal symmetric weakness without sensory loss.
3.Neuromuscular junction diseases cause fatigability.
4.Peripheral neuropathies cause distal asymmetric weakness with atrophy, fasciculations,
sensory loss, and pain.
5.Radiculopathies cause radiating pain.
6.Spinal cord disease causes a triad of distal symmetric weakness, sphincter problems,
and a sensory level.
7.A unilateral lesion within the brain stem often causes "crossed syndromes," in which
ipsilateral dysfunction of one or more cranial nerves is accompanied by hemiparesis
and/or hemisensory loss on the contralateral body.
8.Cerebellar disease causes ataxia and an action tremor.
9.In the brain, cortical lesions may cause aphasia, seizures, and partial hemiparesis (face
and arm only), while subcortical lesions may cause visual field cuts, dense numbness of
primary sensory modalities, and more complete hemiparesis (face, arm, and leg).
10.The brain is isolated from the rest of the body by the blood-brain barrier.
11.Learning and memory are possible because repetitive input to a synapse can cause
persistent changes in neuronal function (long-term potentiation).
12.Some of the most common and important neurologic diseases are caused by
abnormalities in neurotransmitters: Alzheimer's (acetylcholine), epilepsy (-aminobutyric
acid, GABA), Parkinson's (dopamine), migraine (serotonin), and others.
13.Many genetic neurologic diseases have been shown to be caused by expansion of
trinucleotide (triplet) repeat sequences.
14.Foot drop (weakness of the tibialis anterior muscle) can be caused by lesions to the
common peroneal nerve or L5 nerve root.
15.If the facial nerve is damaged (such as from Bell's palsy), the entire side of the face is
weak. If the cortical input to the facial nerve is damaged (such as from a stroke), only the
lower half of the face will be weak.
16.A dilated or "blown" pupil implies compression of the third cranial nerve.
17.Collateral blood flow, often routed through the circle of Willis, sometimes protects
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35.The most common motor neuron disease is amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS).
36.Indications for surgery in patients with radiculopathies are intractable pain,
progressive motor weakness or sensory deficits, or symptoms refractory to a reasonable
degree of nonoperative therapy.
37.Neurogenic claudication (pseudoclaudication) presents typically as bilateral,
asymmetric, lower extremity pain that is provoked by walking (occasionally standing)
and relieved by rest.
38.Sudden damage to the spinal cord can cause spinal shock, which results in temporary
flaccid paralysis, hyporeflexia, sensory loss, and loss of bladder tone.
39.Occlusion of the artery of Adamkiewicz may result in the anterior spinal artery
syndrome, causing bilateral weakness, loss of pain and temperature, and hyperreflexia
below the lesion with preserved dorsal column functions (position and vibration).
40.Cauda equina syndrome is a neurosurgical emergency that presents with weakness and
sensory loss in the lower extremities, prominent radicular pain, saddle anesthesia, and
urinary incontinence.
41.Symptoms of brain stem ischemia are usually multiple, and isolated findings (such as
vertigoor diplopia) are more often caused by peripheral lesions affecting individual
cranial nerves.
42.Mnire's disease presents with the symptomatic triad of episodic vertigo, tinnitus,
and hearing loss. It is caused by an increased amount of endolymph in the scala media.
Pathologically, hair cells degenerate in the macula and vestibule.
43.The blood supply of the brain stem is derived from the vertebrobasilar system of the
posterior circulation.
44.Central pontine myelinolysis occurs primarily in patients suffering from malnutrition
or alcoholism complicated by hyponatremia. Rapid correction of the hyponatremia has
been implicated as a cause of the pathologic abnormality.
45.Posterior fossa neoplasms account for 50% of the total number of neoplasms in
children. In adults, they are much rarer.
46.Lesions of the cerebellar hemisphere impair movement on the ipsilateral side of the
body because of a double-crossing of the pathways.
47.Loss of pigmented dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra is the pathologic
hallmark of Parkinson's disease.
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48.Sinemet (levodopa) remains the most valuable therapy for Parkinson's disease.
49.Essential tremor is the most common cause of non-parkinsonian tremor.
50.Torticollis is the most common form of focal dystonia.
51.Botulinum toxin is the treatment of choice for most focal dystonias.
52.Tardive dyskinesia is a serious side effect of many neuroleptic drugs.
53.Cardinal symptoms of autonomic insufficiency include orthostatic hypotension, bowel
and bladder dysfunction, impotence, and sweating abnormalities.
54.Diabetic neuropathy is one of the most common causes of autonomic dysfunction.
55.Syncope is seldom a neurologic problem; loss of consciousness is almost always due
to cardiovascular disease.
56.Traditionally, the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis requires two separate symptoms at
two different times, or lesions disseminated in time and space.
57.Faulty interpretation of the magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans is the most
common error in misdiagnosing multiple sclerosis.
58.No treatment has yet been shown to prevent ultimate disability in multiple sclerosis.
59.Dementia must be differentiated from delirium and depression.
60.Dementia is a category, not a diagnosis. The clinician must determine the cause of
dementia.
61.Alzheimer's disease is rarely caused by inheriting any abnormal genetic mutation. On
the other hand, patients may inherit risk factors that predispose them to Alzheimer's
disease, such as APOE4.
62.Alzheimer's disease and other dementias are treatable. Both cognitive and behavioral
symptoms can be treated, and long-term therapy may slow decline and help maintain
function.
63.Vascular dementia cannot be diagnosed by MRI or computed tomography (CT) scan
alone.
64.A common cause of excessive daytime sleepiness is the obstructive sleep apnea
syndrome.
65.A patient's own assessment of his sleep quantity and quality is often unreliable.
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Polysomnographic evaluation (sleep laboratory testing) is the only reliable means for
obtaining objective information regarding a suspected sleep disturbance.
66.The classic tetrad of narcolepsy is excessive daytime sleepiness, cataplexy, sleep
paralysis, and hypnagogic hallucinations.
67.Gliomas are the most common primary brain tumors.
68.Astrocytomas are the most common spinal cord tumors.
69.Metastatic brain tumors are 10 times more common than primary brain tumors.
70.Cancer that metastasizes to the spine usually causes pain, a sensory level, paraplegia,
and sphincter disturbances. It is usually treated by radiation therapy.
71.Many cancer patients die in pain because physicians fail to treat pain appropriately.
72.Dysarthria is a defect in the way speech sounds, which can arise from many causes,
whereas aphasia is a defect in the use of language and results from damage to the
dominant (usually left) cerebral cortex.
73.Antibiotics should be given immediately to patients with meningitis and not delayed
while other tests are performed.
74.Mad cow disease is a variant of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease caused by a prion - a
protein that does not require DNA or RNA to replicate and produce infection.
75.Herpes simplex, the most common sporadic encephalitis, often produces focal
neurologic damage and must be aggressively treated with acyclovir.
76.Patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) may develop problems
from the virus itself, the drugs used to treat it, or opportunistic infections.
77.Most patients with a headache due to a serious underlying illness have an abnormal
physical examination. The sudden onset of "the worst headache of my life" should raise
concern about an intracranial hemorrhage.
78.The use of narcotic analgesics for treatment of headaches should be strongly
discouraged.
79.The first choice drugs for acute migraine therapy are the triptans.
80.The best treatment for tension headache is usually amitriptyline plus a nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID).
81.Temporal arteritis should be considered in any elderly patient with new headaches.
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