Difference between revisions of "Initial Behavioral Neurology Appointment Guide"

Line 13: Line 13:
 
Core questions to obtain during the history:
 
Core questions to obtain during the history:
  
'''HPI:'''
+
== HPI ==
 
# When was the problem first noticed?
 
# When was the problem first noticed?
 
# Is it progressive or stable?
 
# Is it progressive or stable?
Line 23: Line 23:
  
  
'''Medical history'''
+
== Medical history ==
 
# Vascular risk factors (HTN, HLD, DM, afib)?
 
# Vascular risk factors (HTN, HLD, DM, afib)?
 
# History of moderate – severe traumatic brain injury?
 
# History of moderate – severe traumatic brain injury?

Revision as of 20:06, 24 June 2021

Practical approach to behavioral neurology initial appointment (60 minutes interview / examination, 30 minutes staffing). The visit will consist of four parts:

  1. The history (from patient, other informants, and chart)
  2. The elemental neurological examination
  3. The cognitive examination
  4. Review of laboratory and imaging data


This is a lot of data, so one must learn how much time to spend during each. Some pieces of information should be reviewed and prepared before the patient is seen, given the limitations of data collection in the given appointment timespan.

I generally try to divide the time into 30 minutes of history, 5-10 minutes of neurological examination, and 20-25 minutes of cognitive testing.


Core questions to obtain during the history:

HPI

  1. When was the problem first noticed?
  2. Is it progressive or stable?
  3. Do they repeat themselves?
  4. How does it interfere with daily functioning / what has it limited the patient from doing?
  5. Are there safety concerns (driving accidents or near misses, leaving stove on, risk of getting lost)?
  6. Are they depressed or anxious?
  7. Do they have symptoms of sleep apnea?


Medical history

  1. Vascular risk factors (HTN, HLD, DM, afib)?
  2. History of moderate – severe traumatic brain injury?
  3. History of seizure disorder / other neurological disorders?


Social history

  1. How far did they go in school, did they have any learning disabilities?
  2. Do they use any substances?


Family history

  1. Is there family history of early onset dementia?


Core pieces of the neurological examination:

  1. Cranial nerves: eye movement abnormalities, masked facies?
  2. Motor: cogwheeling, resting tremor?
  3. Gait: is bradykinesia present? Is there retropulsion?


Core components of cognitive testing:

  1. Global measurement by MoCA
  2. Add semantic fluency (list as many animals possible in 60 seconds)
  3. Do they remember recent news events?
  4. Can they name their grandchildren?


Core components of laboratory or imaging review

  1. MRI
    1. T2 FLAIR axial images to review white matter disease
    2. Coronal T1 to review hippocampus
    3. SWI to review for hemosiderin deposits
  2. Laboratory
    1. Vitamin B12, TSH, CBC, BMP


Basic summary of the patient:

The patient may fall into three categories:

  1. Subjective cognitive impairment: no deficits on cognitive tests and no impairment in iADLs
  2. minor neurocognitive disorder: deficits on cognitive tests and no impairments in iADLs
  3. major neurocognitive disorder: deficits on cognitive tests and impairment in iADLs


If an individual has gradual worsening of cognitive symptoms over time, they may have neurodegenerative disorder. The most common underlying pathology of dementia is Alzheimer’s +/- vascular disease. The second most common is Lewy body disease. Mixed pathology is common in neurodegenerative disorders.


In this basic assessment, supporting evidence of Alzheimer’s disease would include:

  • patient has gradually progressive cognitive symptoms with short-term memory and word-finding difficulties
  • medial temporal / parietal atrophy on MRI
  • poor free recall not supported by cues on MoCA, and worse semantic fluency 37 (list of animals) than letter fluency (F-word on MoCA)


Additional common contributing factors (and potential targets of treatment) to cognitive impairment include:

  • premorbid baseline and effects of normal aging
  • mood / anxiety
  • sleep dysfunction
  • cardiovascular risk factors
  • pain
  • iatrogenic effects (i.e. medication side-effects)