Neuro HX
Neuro HX
Neuro HX
A thorough neurologic history allows the clinician to define the patient's problem and, along with the result of physical
examination, assists in making a diagnosis.
Solid knowledge of the basic principles of the various disease processes is essential for obtaining a good history.
The history of the presenting illness or chief complaint should include the following information:
Symptom onset: Acute onset symptoms (minutes to hours) suggest vascular or convulsive problems and may be
preceded by an aura. Subacute onset (hours to days) occurs with inflammatory pathology such as that associated with
meningitis, Guillian-Barre syndrome. Chronic onset (weeks to months) may indicate malignant aetiology; and onset
in the order of months to years is associated with degenerative disease.
Duration
Course of the condition (eg, static, progressive, or relapsing and remitting)
Associated symptoms, such as pain, headache, nausea, vomiting, weakness, and seizures
Symptoms may be localized or diffuse and a logical assessment of the nervous system level of pathology can be made
on this basis. Is the pathology occurring at the level of the cerebral hemispheres, posterior fossa, spinal cord,
peripheral nervous system?
A complete history often defines the clinical problem and allows the examiner to proceed with a complete but focused
neurologic examination
Presenting symptoms
1) Headache
Nausea/aura Lacrimation
Associations vomiting rhinorrhoea neck stiffness
1
Other causes of headache
Meninges
meningitis
Intra- cranial
Trauma
Tumour / abscess / congenital malformation
Systemic
Vascular
2) Faints
Syncope is defined as a transient loss of consciousness with an inability to maintain postural tone that is followed by
spontaneous recovery. The term syncope excludes seizures, coma, shock, or other states of altered consciousness. Dizziness
(faintness) is the symptom which precedes syncope.
Causes of syncope
Cardiac syncope:
Noncardiac syncope:
Vasovagal syncope is the most common type in young adults but can occur at any age. It usually occurs in a
standing position and is precipitated by fear, emotional stress, or pain (eg, after a needlestick). Autonomic
symptoms are predominant. Classically, nausea, diaphoresis, blurred or faded vision, epigastric discomfort, and
light-headedness precede syncope by a few minutes. Syncope is thought to result in decreased peripheral vascular
resistance. It is not life threatening and occurs sporadically.
Dehydration and decreased intravascular volume contribute to orthostasis. Orthostatic syncope describes a
causative relationship between orthostatic hypotension and syncope.
Situational syncope is essentially a reproducible vasovagal syncope with a known precipitant. Micturition,
defaecation, and carotid sinus syncope are types of situational syncope. These stimuli result in autonomic
reflexes, ultimately leading to transient cerebral hypotension.
Neurologic syncope may have prodromal symptoms such as vertigo, dysarthria, dysphagia, diplopia, and ataxia.
Syncope results from preexisting bilateral vertebrobasilar insufficiency with some superimposed acute process.
Consider a transient ischemic attack as an alternative diagnosis.
A detailed account of the event must be obtained from the patient. The account must include the circumstances surrounding the
episode: the precipitant factors, the patient's activity involved in prior to the event and the patient's position when it occurred.
Physicians should specifically inquire to identify symptoms, such as chest pain, dyspnoea, palpitations, severe
headache, focal neurologic deficits, diplopia, ataxia, or dysarthria prior to the syncopal event.
2
Patients should be asked to estimate the duration of their loss of consciousness. Syncope is associated with patient
estimates ranging from seconds up to 1 minute in most cases. To discriminate from seizures, patients should also be
asked if they remember being confused about their surroundings after the event or whether they have oral trauma
[tongue biting] or incontinence.
A detailed account of the event must also be obtained from any available witnesses. Witnesses can aid the clinician in
differentiating among syncope, altered mental status, and seizure.
3) Fits
Epileptic seizures: sudden change in behaviour due to abnormal electrical activity in the brain (cerebral cortex). Electrical
activity can be measured using an EEG.
Non – epileptic seizures: sudden change in behaviour, without abnormal electrical activity in the brain.
Characteristics of seizure
Altered/loss of consciousness
Involuntary movements – jerking
Incontinence
Tongue-biting
Intracranial infection
Congenital malformation
Tumour
3
4) Dizziness/vertigo
Vertigo is an illusion of movement, caused by disease of the inner ear, the eighth cranial nerve, or the central connections of
the eighth cranial nerve.
Causes of Vertigo
Otitis interna
Acute labyrinthitis
CN 8 Causes
Tumour
Vascular disease
Multiple Sclerosis (demyelination)
5) Deafness
Impaired hearing can be due to damage/ obstruction of the ear canal, or due to damage to the nerve supplying the ear. (CN 8,
vestibulocochlear nerve)
Nerve Causes
Noise exposure
Trauma (skull fracture)
Drugs (alcohol)
Congenital infections (rubella)
6) Visual disturbances
Visual field loss – These patterns are discussed in the clinical tutorials
Visual loss
Stroke
Haemorrhage
Multiple Sclerosis
Retinal vascular occlusion
4
b) Chronic progressive visual loss– damage to the eye/nerve supply/blood supply/brain
Cataracts (ageing/DM/glaucoma/steroids)
Diabetes Mellitus (damages blood supply and nerves and causes cataracts)
Ageing (macular degeneration)
7) Gait
Many neurological conditions can impair walking. Gait can be abnormal due to disease of
8) Disturbed sensation
With regards to temperature sensation, patients can be asked whether they have any problems detecting water temperature.
Failure to notice cuts, wounds after injury due to lack of sensation. For fine touch discrimination, patients can be asked
whether they have problems pulling the correct coin or other objects out of their pockets. Position sense can be explored by
asking whether patients have problems knowing where their feet are on the car accelerator and brake pedals.
One should also inquire about pins and needles which can result from nerve entrapement or peripheral neuropathy
Diabetes Mellitus
Chronic renal failure
Vitamin B12 deficiency
Hereditary syndromes
9) Weakness
Causes
Following CVA
Cerebral tumour
Spinal cord injury
DM
Toxins
5
Motor Neuron Disease
Neuromuscular junction
Myasthenia gravis
Muscle
Alcohol
Medications (steroids)
Connective tissue diseases (SLE)
Endocrine (thyroid disease, Cushing’s, acromegaly)
Distinguish between resting (visible at rest), postural (present throughout movement) and intention (increases toward target).
Parkinson’s disease
Cerebellar disease
Hyperthyroidism
Anxiety
Medications (inhalers, e.g. Ventolin)
11) Speech
Causes of dysarthria
Receptive dysphasia: where the patient cannot understand the spoken or written word. Speech is fluent but
disorganised. Ask patient to follow commands, unable to do so.
Expressive dysphasia: the patient understands but cannot answer appropriately. Ask to name objects, repeat
words.
Nominal dysphasia: patient cannot name objects. Point to your pen, watch and ask patient to name them.
Start with the OPEN ENDED enquiry first. “Have you ever been admitted to hospital for any reason?” is a good way to start.
Follow this with “Do you have any medical conditions or health problems of any kind?” and “Have you ever had any
operations no matter how minor before?”
In this part of the history it is helpful to ask the open ended question in a number of ways because what you and the patient
consider a past medical history does not always coincide.
6
Then you can focus on specifics. If the answer is “yes” to any of these, ask what the treatment has been, any changes in
treatment and how successful any treatment has been.
Medications/Allergies
Enquire about allergies and whether any medication has made the patient unwell before. Ask what the patient means by
“allergy”?
Relevant specifics:
Social History
Home circumstances: Including who is with the patient at home and the general health of that person, home
modifications and home layout.
Occupation
Smoking (how much and how long?).
Alcohol intake (Long term alcohol use is associated with dementia, neuropathy, cerebellar degeneration,
encephalopathy)
Family History
Again, OPEN ENDED enquiry first. “Are there any medical conditions that run in the family?”
Then more specific if suitable (i.e. not in an 85 year old patient): “Are your parents still alive?” “How is their health?”
or “What was the cause of their passing?”
The same for siblings
Then “Any relatives with a neurological condition?”
Family history of heart disease, stroke, hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, epilepsy
Systems review
Start with “ Is there anything else you would like to add” or “Do you have any other symptoms to report ”
Then ask about general wellbeing, weight and appetite.
Then 4-5 questions about each body system in quick point form.