- Joined
- Mar 30, 2006
- Messages
- 372
- Reaction score
- 1
I'll give you your imaging after exam. In other words, you could get it with exam alone. But I'm gonna ask you for specific things you examine and how just to be a pain in the S3-S5 dermatomes.
Occasional "tension Headaches" lifelong, but none out of the ordinary lately. No weakness or numbness, vision changes, or seizures. It's only in his right ear. No history of heart trouble, but has "borderline high blood pressure" according to his doc, controlled without meds. No kidney trouble. Cholesterol was mildly elevated, but he started taking fish oil, and now it's good. No drug use. Only meds are the fish oil and occasionally a few aspirin for HA.
No "whooshing" on exam. What specifically would you do to test the CNs?
If the Rinne test is abnormal on the right, then that indicates conductive hearing loss on the right. A Weber test should lateralize to the deaf ear in conductive hearing loss, which would properly be the right ear.
Causes of conductive hearing loss would include cerumen impaction, otitis externa, otitis media, neoplasms, exostoses, and tympanic membrane perforation.
How does he respond to a Whisper test? I would irrigate the ears to view the tympanic membranes, also.
An audiogram and an MRI would be appropriate to order.
I would irrigate the ears to view the tympanic membranes, also.
So, you clean out his ears, and the L TM looks NL. The R TM is unusual -- it has a purplish spot on it that takes up about 1/4 the area of the visible TM.
While you are examining him, he complains of a pain that is developing in the area of his right mastoid process. You look there, and there is nothing visible from the outside. No other symptoms, and no change in CN exam.
32 yo man with terrible headache on the right side. Non-throbbing. Onset two days prior after gradual onset, no change since. Has had about 5 headaches in his life previously, all due to alcohol hangovers. No associated migranous features. Exam is normal. Labs are normal. Sed rate wasn't back, but will prove to be normal. Head CT shows a thickening of the tentorium ipsilaterally to the headache. Without a picture, that's the best I can do. Radiology read is normal, when you bring it to their attention, they say MRI and possible SDH. This guy doesn't have a SDH. Any other considerations?
My guess at the Dx: Idiopathic hypertrophic cranial pachymeningitis
M-dopa, You is da Man! Yeah, focal pachymeninitis seems to fit the picture. I wouldn't be so quick to call it "idiopathic" before ruling out specific causes. The one case I saw more than 10 years ago turned out to be syphilitic. Besides syphilis, you need to consider sarcoid, TB, and fungal meningitis. Also rheumatic disease, especially Bechet's. I think the next step would be LP and of course get an HIV test. Great case, neglect. Keep us updated.🙂
Nick
This makes me think I didn't consider things fully.
The history I hid: he had an idiopathic DVT in the past. The thickened tentorium was just deep to the skull.
Anyone want to order another imaging study? How soon would you order it?
Anyway, he did well in the hospital.
OK, now I am thinking of a venous thrombosis involving the transverse sinuses. How about MRA or just go to regular cerebral angio?
Nick
Out of curiosity, which transverse sinus was occluded?
Pregnant woman in her 29th week, in the ER because she cannot move her left shoulder. She has some deep gnawing pain in that shoulder, deltoid is 2/5, bi is 4/5, rest of arm is spared. No bicep reflex. No other medical problems.
What would you do?
Next step? EMG/NCS, neuroimaging of the C-spine, and LP.
BTW, I don't mean to be a curmudgeon, but "bicep" is not a real word. This is a common mistake, due to the erroneous assumption that "biceps" is a plural noun whose singular is "bicep." "Biceps" is singular. Ther pural, if you want to use it, would be "bicipetes." 🙂
or "bicipites." Various spellings are possible.
How useful is EMG if you're thinking plexitis? Will it show you anything?
You already know which nerves are involved. And you know there is no bicipetes reflexetes!😀
I'm surprised you would not be aware of this.
Nick
... We had one case of brachial plexitis and the attending said it would be useless to get an EMG. He probably meant specifically with the case in hand rather than in general.
waiting. The MRI is pending of the plexus first, hold up by insurance. I don't think she has a C5 lesion...
Based on your exam (weakness of deltoid and biceps only, no other muscles affected), I would also doubt a C5 lesion. With a C5 lesion I'd also expect some involvement of the pec major, brachioradialis, and possibly the ECR.
This really sounds like some autoimmune partial upper plexitis or even a C5 radiculitis, especially with its getting better. I've seen this post-partum, but never pre-partum. It may be worth going all out to locate a lesion and writing up the case. Consider a thorough EMG/NCS study, high-field (3+ Tesla) MRI w/gad (the root or part of the plexus may light up), and LP. Of course someone will need to pay for it, and her insurer seems to be balking...and she IS getting better, so it will be a very hard sell.
One of the "nice things" about residency training in academic/governmental teaching hospitals is the ability to waste other people's money in the pursuit of answers to cases like this one. 😉