Jeopardy Stumper

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Ginkoba4

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Hi guys,

Trying to think of good jeopardy questions for our end of the year NeuroBowl, does anyone have a good one for a Final Jeopardy question? Anything that has a video clue might make it more challenging. 🙂
 
Who run Bartertown?
 
No, that would be too easy, the answer is no one because everyone suffered from TBIs.
 
Who can name 3 people in this painting?

charcotdemonstratinghistechnique.jpg
 
Who can name 3 people in this painting?

charcotdemonstratinghistechnique.jpg

It's a great painting. Charcot is teaching, Babinski is supporting the hysterical woman, and (Charcot's student) Pierre Martin is seated in front of the window. I originally saw a copy in Garrison's History of Neurology.

Great, great question!
 
Two good ones - show a video of pulsatile exophthalmos and ask for the underlying condition, show a video of oculomasticatory myorhythmia and ask for the underlying diagnosis. Both videos are available in neurology residents/fellows section.
 
"Two good ones - show a video of pulsatile exophthalmos and ask for the underlying condition, show a video of oculomasticatory myorhythmia and ask for the underlying diagnosis. Both videos are available in neurology residents/fellows section."

Great idea!

Although, you've ruined the question now, especially after I disclose the answers of carotid-cavernous fistula and whipple's disease 🙂
 
Pulsatile exopthalmos (or enopthalmos, can be either) can also occur in NF1 in patients with a sphenoid wing dysplasia and a large orbital neurofibroma, so you could make it a more difficult question by asking what two conditions, or just take either.
 
Two good ones - show a video of pulsatile exophthalmos and ask for the underlying condition, show a video of oculomasticatory myorhythmia and ask for the underlying diagnosis. Both videos are available in neurology residents/fellows section.

Ah yes, one of the rare movement disorders that actually persists in sleep, and a condition that involves whipping out a stethoscope to try and hear a bruit over the eyeball.

I would be thrilled to catch a case of Whipple's with this. Have you seen one?
 
Never seen pulsatile exophthalmos, and I've seen a number of NF1 patients with sphenoid wing dysplasia. Oculomasticatory myorhytmia or oculofacioskeletal myorhythmia, I, like you, am still anxiously waiting to have that great A-ha! moment and state the diagnosis, bowel biopsy findings, species taxonomy, and appropriate antibiotic regimen all in the same sentence.
 
Hah, thanks for the ideas, came up with the Whipple's question independently, good to know that neurologist minds think alike.
 
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