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MEDSURG | [Part 1] Neurological System Assessment
Season 2
Published 5 months ago
Description
🧠 High-Yield Neurology Study Guide (RN Prep)
1️⃣ Neuron Basics & Injury Patterns
- Neurons: Excitable cells that transmit impulses via action potentials & neurotransmitters.
- Glial cells: Support neurons. 🧩 Astrocytes form scar tissue; Oligodendrocytes (CNS) + Schwann cells (PNS)make myelin.
- UMN Lesions: Weakness, spasticity, hyperreflexia, ↑ tone. (Think: stroke, SCI.)
- LMN Lesions: Flaccid paralysis, atrophy, fasciculations, ↓ reflexes. (Think: Guillain-Barré, spinal root injury.)
2️⃣ Neuro Protection & Fluid
- Meninges: Dura → Arachnoid → Pia.
- CSF: 150 mL circulates; cushions brain; made in choroid plexus.
- BBB: Blocks toxins; lipid-soluble drugs cross easiest.
3️⃣ Neuro Assessment Essentials
- Vitals: HR 60–100 bpm, RR 15–20, SpO₂ > 95%, BP 100–140/60–90.
- LOC: GCS = Eyes + Verbal + Motor.
- Pupils: PERRLA = equal, round, reactive, accommodate.
- Language: • Broca = expressive (can’t speak) 🗣️ • Wernicke = receptive (word salad).
- Speech Motor: Dysarthria; often w/ dysphagia.
4️⃣ Red-Flag Findings ⚠️
- Nystagmus: Cerebellar/brainstem lesion or toxicity.
- Areflexia: LMN issue.
- Hyperreflexia/Clonus: UMN lesion.
- Analgesia/Anesthesia: Sensory tract damage.
- Astereognosis: Parietal cortex lesion.
5️⃣ Cranial Nerves 🧩 (key ones) I = Smell 👃 II = Vision 👁️ III, IV, VI = Eye movement/pupil V = Face sensation + chew VII = Expression/taste (ant 2/3) X = Gag, swallow, voice
6️⃣ Diagnostics & Nursing Pearls
- Lumbar Puncture: L3-L5; flat after, ↑ fluids 💧. ⚠️ Contra: ↑ICP, anticoag use.
- Post-LP HA: from ↓ CSF pressure.
- CSF: • Bacterial: ↑P, ↑WBC (poly), ↓glucose • Viral: ↑mono cells, nml glucose • SAH: RBCs + xanthochromia (yellow).
- CT: Fast for bleed/TBI; if contrast → hold Metformin 48 h.
- MRI: No metal! (pacers, implants, shrapnel).
- Angiography: NPO; monitor site/bleeding; leg flat 4-6 h.
7️⃣ Labs & Metabolic Links
- Na⁺↓ (SIADH/CHF) → confusion/seizure.
- Na⁺↑ (dehydration) → irritability.
- K⁺↓ (diuretics) → muscle weakness.
- K⁺↑ (renal fail, ACEi) → arrhythmias.
- Vit B₁₂↓ → neuropathy + megaloblastic anemia.
- Thiamine (B₁)↓ → Wernicke’s encephalopathy (alcohol use).
- Ammonia ↑ → hepatic encephalopathy (liver fail).