Chapter 025. Numbness, Tingling, and Sensory Loss (Part 3) pptx

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Chapter 025. Numbness, Tingling, and Sensory Loss (Part 3) pptx

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Chapter 025. Numbness, Tingling, and Sensory Loss (Part 3) Examination of Sensation The main components of the sensory examination are tests of primary sensation (pain, touch, vibration, joint position, and thermal sensation; Table 25- 1). Table 25-1 Testing Primary Sensation Sense Test Device Endings Activated Fib er Size Mediatin g Cent ral Pathway Pain Pinpr ick Cutaneous nociceptors Sm all SpTh , also D Temperat ure, heat War m metal object Cutaneous thermoreceptors for hot Sm all SpTh Temperat ure, cold Cold metal object Cutaneous thermoreceptors for cold Sm all SpTh Touch Cotto n wisp, fine brush Cutaneous mechanoreceptors, also naked endings Lar ge and small Lem, also D and SpTh Vibration Tuni ng fork, 128 Hz Mechanorecep tors, especially pacinian corpuscles Lar ge Lem, also D Joint Passi ve Joint capsule and tendon endings, Lar Lem, position movement of specific joints muscle spindles ge also D Note: D, diffuse ascending projections in ipsilateral and contralateral anterolateral columns; SpTh, spinothalamic projection, contralateral; Lem, posterior column and lemniscal projection, ipsilateral.Some general principles pertain. The examiner must depend on patient responses, particularly when testing cutaneous sensation (pin, touch, warm, or cold), which complicates interpretation. Further, examination may be limited in some patients. In a stuporous patient, for example, sensory examination is reduced to observing the briskness of withdrawal in response to a pinch or other noxious stimulus. Comparison of response on one side of the body to the other is essential. In the alert but uncooperative patient, it may not be possible to examine cutaneous sensation, but some idea of proprioceptive function may be gained by noting the patient's best performance of movements requiring balance and precision. Frequently, patients present with sensory symptoms that do not fit an anatomic localization and that are accompanied by either no abnormalities or gross inconsistencies on examination. The examiner should then consider whether the sensory symptoms are a disguised request for help with psychological or situational problems. Discretion must be used in pursuing this possibility. Finally, sensory examination of a patient who has no neurologic complaints can be brief and consist of pinprick, touch, and vibration testing in the hands and feet plus evaluation of stance and gait, including the Romberg maneuver. Evaluation of stance and gait also tests the integrity of motor and cerebellar systems. PRIMARY SENSATION (See Table 25-1) The sense of pain is usually tested with a clean pin, asking the patient to focus on the pricking or unpleasant quality of the stimulus and not just the pressure or touch sensation elicited. Areas of hypalgesia should be mapped by proceeding radially from the most hypalgesic site (Figs. 25-2 and 25-3).Figure 25-2 . Chapter 025. Numbness, Tingling, and Sensory Loss (Part 3) Examination of Sensation The main components of the sensory examination are tests of primary. can be brief and consist of pinprick, touch, and vibration testing in the hands and feet plus evaluation of stance and gait, including the Romberg maneuver. Evaluation of stance and gait also. performance of movements requiring balance and precision. Frequently, patients present with sensory symptoms that do not fit an anatomic localization and that are accompanied by either no abnormalities

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