NR 603 Week 1 APEA Predictor
Exam Review Questions and
Answers
A 75-year-old man is involved in a motor vehicle accident and strikes his
... [Show More] forehead on the windshield. He complains of neck pain and severe burning in his shoulders and arms. His physical examination reveals weakness of his upper extremities. What type of spinal cord injury does this patient have?
A anterior cord syndrome
B central cord syndrome
C Brown-Séquard syndrome
D complete cord transection
E cauda equina syndrome
ANS: B - ANS-Central Cord Syndrome
the central cord syndrome involves loss of motor function that is more severe in the upper extremities than in the lower extremities, and is more severe in the hands. There is typically hyperesthesia over the shoulders and arms. Anterior cord syndrome presents with paraplegia or quadriplegia, loss of lateral spinothalamic function with preservation of posterior column function. Brown-Séquard syndrome consists of weakness and loss of posterior column function on one side of the body distal to the lesion with contralateral loss of lateral spinothalamic function one to two levels below the lesion. Complete cord transection would affect motor and sensory function distal to the lesion. Cauda equina syndrome typically presents as low back pain with radiculopathy.
A 74-year-old man presents after his wife witnessed him grab his head in pain and fall to the floor. He has not regained consciousness. His current blood pressure is 150/96 mm Hg, and his heart rate is 65 bpm. Emergent head CT shows a subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Question
In addition to life saving interventions, what prescription medication will most benefit this patient at this time?
Answer Choices
1 Furosemide (loop diuretic)
2 Prednisone (glucocorticoid)
3 Tranexamic acid (antifibrinolytic agent)
4 Labetolol (beta blocker)
5 Nimodipine (calcium channel blocker)
ANS: 5 - ANS-Nimodipine (CCB)
Nimodipine, a calcium channel blocker, has been shown to improve outcomes in patients following aneurysmal SAH. The mechanism of action is thought to be prevention of ischemia. Glucocorticoids (e.g., prednisone) are often utilized in patients with SAH because they offer symptomatic relief of headache and neck pain, but they have not been proved to decrease cerebral edema. Antifibrinolytic agents (e.g., Tranexamic acid) can be utilized in patients with a diagnosed aneurysm who cannot undergo directed treatment, but they are not routinely
A 37-year-old man fell from a ladder as he finished hanging the Christmas lights on his house. The right side of his head hit the alley cement, and he lost consciousness for about 1 minute; he woke up with a headache, but he had no other complaints. A few hours later, the patient is brought to the emergency room by his neighbor because of an intense headache, confusion, and left hand hemiparesis. On examination, the patient has a bruise located over the right temporal region, mydriasis, and right deviation of the right eye, papilledema, and left extensor plantar response. An emergency CT scan of the head without contrast reveals a lens-shaped hyper-density under the right temporal bone with mass effect and edema. What is the most likely diagnosis?
Answer Choices
1 Epidural hematoma
2 Subdural hematoma
3 Subarachnoid hemorrhage
4 Intracerebral parenchymal hemorrhage
5 Acute meningitis
ANS: 1 - ANS-Epidural Hematoma
Epidural hematoma most often results from a traumatic tear of the middle meningeal artery. Although a lucid interval ranging from minutes to hours followed by altered mental status and focal deficits is typical for epidural hematoma, this clinical picture is only encountered in up to 1/3 of the patients. The collection of blood between the skull and dura mater causes an evident mass effect with ophthalmic nerve palsy and the contralateral hemiparesis. Surgical evacuation of the clot via burr holes is the treatment of choice. [Show Less]