Clinical Syndromes

Peripheral Nerve Damage

Limited Damage
      - although damage may be severe, deficits are limited to the structures innervated by the particular affected nerve(s). (Deficits may be widespread in cases of polyneuritis//polyneuropathy.)

Flaccid Paralysis
      - paralysis is flaccid and includes areflexia of muscles innervated by the particular nerve(s)

Neurogenic Muscle Atrophy
      - atrophy of muscles innervated by the particular nerve(s) is severe and relatively rapid (evident by two weeks)

Skin Anesthesia/Analgesia
      - anesthesia of skin fields innervated by cutaneous branches of affected nerve(s)

Note:
      There is a resemblence between neuropathy syndromes and syndromes produced by CNS lower motor neuron damage and diseases of neuromuscular junctions.

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Clinical Syndromes

Spinal Cord Damage

Cauda Equina Syndrome

Damage affects sacral and caudal spinal segments/roots, which innervate the pelvis & tail.

      - tail flaccid paralysis, muscle atrophy, and skin anesthesia

      - perineum anesthesia, including the anal region

      - fecal and urinary incontinence due to sphincter paralysis

      - enlarged atonic bladder with urine overflow

Lumbosacral Spinal Syndrome

Damage affects spinal segments/roots L4 - S1, which innervate the pelvic limb.

segmental & LMN deficits:

      - pelvic limb muscles exhibit flaccid paralysis, areflexia, and muscle atrophy

      - pelvic limb skin exhibts areas of anesthesia

tract & UMN deficits:

      - tail voluntary paralysis and loss of conscious sensation

      - voluntary incontinence; incomplete urination with residual urine retention

Thoracolumbar Spinal Syndrome

Damage affects spinal segments/roots T3 - L3, which innervate the trunk.

segmental & LMN deficits:

      - absence of cutaneous trunci reflex caudal to the lesion; cutaneous hyper/hypo-esthesia at lesion level; (LMN clinical signs are difficult to detect)

tract & UMN deficits:

      - voluntary paralysis and loss of conscious sensation in pelvic limb & tail

      - pelvic limb:

          deficits of postural reactions (e.g., proprioceptive positioning, hopping, hemiwalking, etc.);

          extensor muscle hypertonus may be present (pending the nature of tract damage);

          spinal reflexes are present, including abnormal crossed-extension.

      - voluntary incontinence; incomplete urination with residual urine retention (detrusor-sphincter dyssynergy)

Note:
      Extensor hypertonus may be evident in thoracic limbs due to loss of inhibition from pelvic limbs.

Cervicothoracic Spinal Syndrome

Damage affects spinal segments/roots C6 - T2, the cervical enlargement which innervates the thoracic limb.

segmental & LMN deficits:

      - thoracic limb muscles may exhibit flaccid paralysis, areflexia, and muscle atrophy

      - thoracic limb skin may exhibit areas of anesthesia

      - cutaneous trunci reflex may be absent due to damage to lateral thoracic nerve neurons

tract & UMN deficits:

      - voluntary paralysis and loss of conscious sensation in trunk, pelvic limb & tail

      - pelvic limb: ataxia; deficits of postural reactions (e.g., proprioceptive positioning, hopping, hemiwalking, etc.); extensor muscle hypertonus may be present; spinal reflexes are present, including abnormal crossed-extension;

      - voluntary incontinence; incomplete urination with residual urine retention (detrusor-sphincter dyssynergy)

Cervical Spinal Syndrome

Damage affects spinal segments/roots C1 - C5, which innervate the neck.

segmental & LMN deficits:

      - cutaneous hyper/hypo-esthesia at lesion level; (LMN clinical signs are difficult to detect)

tract & UMN deficits:

      - voluntary paralysis and loss of conscious sensation caudal to the neck

      - thoracic & pelvic limbs: ataxia; deficits of postural reactions (e.g., proprioceptive positioning, hopping, hemiwalking, etc.); extensor muscle hypertonus may be present; spinal reflexes are present, including abnormal crossed-extension;

      - voluntary incontinence; incomplete urination with residual urine retention (detrusor-sphincter dyssynergy)

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Clinical Syndromes

Hindbrain

Brainstem: pons & medulla oblongata

Damage to cranial nerves can indicate the level(s) of a brainstem lesion(s):
      - trigeminal nerve [pons]: loss of face sensation & paralysis of muscles of mastication
      - abducent nerve [rostral medulla]: medial strabismus (the nerve runs to the orbital fissure)
      - facial nerve [medulla]: paralysis of facial expression,e.g., drooped lips
      - vestibulocochlear nerve [medulla]: vestibular syndrome; unilateral deafness
      - glossopharyngeal nerve [rostral medulla]: impaired gag reflexes and pharyngeal sensation
      - vagus nerve [medulla]: paralysis of pharynx and larynx (gag reflexes & voice change)
      - hypoglossal nerve [caudal medulla]: tongue paralysis, atrophy & deviation toward lesion side

Damage to descending tracts that originate and/or pass through the hindbrain:
      - pontine reticulospinal & lateral vestibulospinal: ipsilateral falling (extensor hypotonus)
      - rubrospinal tract: ipsilateral joint flexion paralysis of thoracic & pelvic limbs
      - pyramidal tract: contralateral weakness of manus & pes, especially navigating steps

Damage to autonomic centers could impact respiration, heart rate, etc.

Vestiibular Syndrome

Vestibular syndromes can result from damage affecting the labyrinth, vestibular nerve, vestibular nuclei and/or cerebellum

Vestibular syndromes reflect the brain’s response to a right/left imbalance of vestibular input, the imbalance due to a lesion instead of head acceleration

The direction of the clinical signs reveals which side is damaged (decreased neural activity); the severity of the clinical signs reflects the severity of the lesion (extent of the imbalance)

Clinical signs comprising the vestibular syndrome include:
- head tilt [down ear toward the lesioned side]
- stumbling, falling, rolling [toward the lesioned side]
- nystagmus [slow phase toward the lesioned side]
(nystagmus in a vertical direction, as opposed to horizontal, is said to indicate a brain lesion location).

Cerebellar Syndrome

Cerebellar damage generally causes excess muscle tone & exaggerated movement.

Clinical signs associate with a cerebellar syndrome include:
      - wide based stance (required for to maintain balance during standing)
      - ataxic gait (limb foot-fall placement is inconsistent and malpositioned)
      - hypermetric gait (limbs are protracted too high and slammed down too hard)
      - intention tremor (e.g., head tremor, exhibited when the head is not resting on the ground)
      - body swaying (another manifestation of tremor)
      - menace response deficiency (elicited by threatening gesture). Judgment of rate of changing distance for approaching objects is impaired.

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Clinical Syndromes

Midbrain

Destructive lesions of the midbrain would be expected to produce:

- paresis/paralysis of the contralateral limbs due to red nucleus damage (contralateral deficits occur when the damage is rostral to the rubrospinal tract decussation in the caudal midbrain); damage to corticospinal axons in the crus cerebri would impact the contralateral manus/pes

- lateral strabismus and loss of the pupillary light reflex would result from oculomotor nucleus/nerve damage

- trochlear nucleus/nerve damage would impair (dorsal) eye rotation toward the nose

- impaired orientation of the head, eyes & ears toward a sudden visual (rostral colliculus) or auditory (caudal colliculus) stimulus

- coma may result from destruction of the reticular activating system (which generates background excitation for the cerebral cortex)

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Clinical Syndromes

Diencephalon

Destructive lesions of the diencephalon would be expected to produce:

- crying behavior (apparently due to pain) has been observed with thalamic infarct lesions

- loss of conscious sensation (information is relayed to the neocortex through the thalamus)

- blindness:
      optic nerve damage: ipsilateral complete blindness & absent pupillary reflex to ipsilateral light
      optic tract or lateral geniculate nucleus damage: contralateral sides of visual fields are blind for both eyes

- endocrine disorders, due to hypothalamic & pituitary damage

- autonomic disorders related to eating, drinking, temperature regulation, circadian rhythms, etc., due to hypothalamus damage

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Clinical Syndromes

Cerebrum

Destructive lesions of the cerebrum could produce:

- mental impairment:
      depressed alertness & interaction with surroundings
      depressed intelligence & deficient learning/learned behavior (including house-training)

- impaired voluntary movement:
       spastic paralysis (damage to: cerebral cortex--basal nuclei--thalamus--motor cortex circuitry)
      pacing (wide-circling toward lesion side)
      head pressing

- inability to perform goal-directed behavior (task focusing, short term memory, ignoring distractions, controlling emotions) as a result of damage to the prefrontal cortex of the frontal lobe

- neglect syndrome (parts of a patient's own body are regarded as foreign by the patient)

- seizures

- mood alteration (such as uncharacteristic aggression or docility) .

Note: Lesions in one cerebral hemisphere produce contralateral motor/sensory deficits.

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