Post-concussion syndrome

Post-concussion syndrome

Definition
mTBI ✚ persistent sx  fx impact  exclusion

mTBI
Head trauma with ± brief loss of consciousness (<30 min)
•± post‑traumatic amnesia (<24 h)
•± confusion/disorientation
•GCS 13–15
•No structural brain injury explaining symptoms

Persistent sx
•One or more post‑concussive sx
•Persisting beyond expected recovery
>4 weeks (children/adolescents)
>3 months (adults)

Sx domains
-Somatic: headache, dizziness, fatigue, photophobia/phonophobia
-Cognitive: attention deficit, memory impairment, slowed processing, executive dysfunction
-Emotional/Behavioral: irritability, anxiety, depression, emotional lability
-Sleep: insomnia, hypersomnia, fragmented sleep

Cannabis use disorder

Cannabis use disorder (CUD)

Note
-DSM-V criteria for CUD
-RCVS

Cannabis withdrawal syndrome
>not life-threatening, but can last 2 wks

Treatment
-Psychosocial tx (CBT) 

-OFF-label
>Acetylcysteine (NAC 1200 mg BID)
>Gabapentin
>Mirtazapine
>Dronabinol/nabiximols

Increase Alertness

Increase Alertness
Situations
-Stroke (mainly thalamic)
-PD/ MS
-Consciousness disorder (TBI)
-Narcolepsy/ OSA residual sleepiness

Medications
Base on safety

In-hospital
1st: caffeine, amantadine
2nd: methylphenidate
3rd: levodopa

Outpatient: 
-modafinil/ armodafinil, bupropion, atomoxetine
-dextroamphetamine, lisdexamfetamine

Unclear:
-solriamfetol, pitolisant
Safety pearls
-Avoid late‑day dosing → insomnia, agitation
-Monitor BP/HR with methylphenidate, amphetamines, solriamfetol
-Renal adjust amantadine
-Modafinil induces CYP3A4 → ↓ OCP effectiveness
-Start low and titrate weekly

Neuroimaging Acquisition (CTA HN & CTV & DE)

Neuroimaging Acquisition
CTA H&N and CTV and DE

CTA H&N

Note
-1 CTA radiation is equal to 13 mo

Patient preparation
-Large‑bore peripheral IV (usually 18–20 G)
-Preferred site: antecubital vein (2/2 resistance)

Contrast parameters
-Volume: 50–100 mL
-Injection rate: 3–6 mL/s
-Saline flush: 20–40 mL

Timing the scan
Bolus tracking
-A small ROI is placed over a target artery (e.g., aortic arch, carotid)
-The scanner automatically triggers acquisition when attenuation reaches a preset threshold (e.g., 100–150 HU)(our hospital 130); or can manually press ☢️

Graph pressure vs timing
-Maximum pressure: 300 psi (standard)
*peak injection pressure
1, contrast injection; 2, finish of contrast injection

Time between injection to imaging
-Arterial phase 20-22s
-Venous phase 45s
*dependent of cardiac output

CTV acquisition
-Separate imaging
-If more than 3 minutes of last CTA H&N, wait 4h
-Acquisition window 40–60s

Dual Energy (DECT)
-Usual CTH is 120 Kvp
>DE is low (80–90) and high (140–150) energy acquisition
*Low→ iodine; High→ blood 
-Creates 2 maps→ iodine (IOM) & non-iodine (VNC-Virtual non-contrast)
-CT scans w/ DE
>Siemens SOMATOM Force / Drive→ 2 tubes
>Philips Spectral CT→ dual-layer
>GE Revolution→ rapid switch

Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU)

Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (EMU)


How to restart ASM

Lamotrigine
- if < 7d, LMT can be restarted fully no risk of SJS

Stroke - Antiplatelet drugs

Antiplatelet drugs

COX inhibitors

Glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors
-Integrilin
ADP receptor/P2Y12 inhibitors

-Cangrelor drip

-Prasugrelblack-box of ICH in pts w/ previous stroke/ TIA

Phosphodiesterase inhibitors

Epileptogenic Zone

Epileptogenic Zone
“Area of cortex that is necessary and sufficient for initiating seizures and whose removal (or disconnection) is necessary for complete abolition of seizures”
Hans Lüders, 1993

History
1884-1935 (Sir John Hughlings Jackson & Victor Horseley)
-1st cortical resections for EPI
-Szs originate from a specific cortical region that can be surgically targeted

Early–Mid 20th Century: Penfield & Jasper
-ECoG to map, now epileptic activity can be recorded & localized

1966: Tailarach & Bancaud
-sEEG based definition

1993Lüders
-EZ, hypothetical concept

2000s–present
-Focal view to network model

Concepts
EZ
-Minimum amount of cortex to achieve SF
-Inferered it by combining multiple zones

Seizure onset zone (SOZ)
-Szs is actually generated as measured by EEG

Ictal onset zone (IOZ)
-Szs actually begin, as recorded on sEEG
>Often smaller than the EZ
>Sometimes only part of true epileptogenic network

Potential ictal onset zone
-Might be involved in szs onset but are not definitively proven due to limited data
>Common in sEEG when sampling is incomplete

Irritative zone
-Generates interictal epileptiform discharges as defined by EEG
>Usually larger than true EZ
>Helps guide electrode placement but is not sufficient for surgical targeting

Epileptic lesion zone
-Structural abnormality seen on neuroimaging believed to be source of szs
>Not all lesions are epileptogenic, and some EZs occur without visible lesions

Early spread zone
-Region involved immediately after szs onset
>Helps distinguish primary onset from rapid spread
>Spread zones are not necessarily part of EZ

Symptomatogenic zone
-Activation produces clinical sx of szs
>Sx often reflect spread, not onset
>Not removed if overlaping essential function

Eloquent cortex
-Damage causes major, permanent deficits
>Avoid resecting, unless absolutely necessary

Non-eloquent cortex
-Resection is less likely to cause major functional impairment
>Most resections target this area

Putative epileptogenic zone (Resection margins)
-Estimated EZ based on all available data
-Area planed to be removed
-Practical, clinically actionable version of theoretical EZ

Musician's Dystonia

Musician's Dystonia
"When I try to move the fourth finger of my right hand, my whole body seems to contort."
Robert Schumann (1810–1856)

Musician's history
-Robert Schumann (1810–1856) – Composer / Pianist
-Leon Fleisher (1928–2020) – Pianist
-Gary Graffman (1928–2025) – Pianist
-David Leisner (b. 1953) – Classical Guitarist / Composer
-Reinhard Goebel (b. 1952) – Baroque Violinist
-Glenn Gould (1932–1982) – Pianist 
-Joachim‑Ernst Berendt (1922–2000) – Jazz Critic / Saxophonist
-Billy McLaughlin (b. 1953) – Fingerstyle Guitarist

Definition
-Focal task-specific DTN of the musicians' arm (FTSDma)
-1st describe was William Gowers

Epidemiology
-Onset: typically 3rd–5th decade
-Often after ~30 yrs / ≥10,000 h of playing
>Early musical training (<10 yo, Suzuki method) may be protective
-Male predominance
-High-risk instruments: piano, guitar, violin, brass, woodwinds

Phenomenology
-If not visible, record & see slow-motion
-Hand & OMD (can affect speech, eating, drinking)
-FHD divided in 4 types
G1 Precision→ 2&3
G2 Power→ 3&4&5
G3 Precision→1&2
G4 Proximal
G1 - Precision
1) Pianist, isolated dystonic extension of the second digit (Ia pattern)
2) Guitarist, dystonic extension of 2 and flexion of 3 (pattern Ib)
3) Pianist, dystonic flexion of 2 (pattern Ic)
4) Pianist, dystonic flexion of 2 and extension of 3, (pattern Id)
5) Banjo player, dystonic flexion of 2 and 3 appears mild (pattern Ie)
6) Irish accordion player, extension of 3
7) Guitarist, dystonic extension of 2 and 3 (pattern Ig)

G2 - Power
1) Violinist, dystonic flexion of 4 and 5 (pattern IIa)
2) Pianist, dystonic flexion of the left third and fourth finger (pattern IId)
3) Pianist, dystonia affecting fingers 3-5 (pattern IIc)
4) Piccolo player, dystonic flexion of the left third finger at the middle phalanx (pattern IId)
*Botox at the flexor digitorum superficialis of 3
5) Pianist, extension of 3 and flexion of 4 and 5
6) Violinist, flexion of 4 (likely lumbrical-mediated)
7) Flexion of the 3rd finger (likely lumbrical-mediated) (pattern IIf)
8) Extension of 4 and 5
9) Jazz guitarist, flexion of 5 (pattern IIi)

G3 - Precision
1) Flexion/adduction of the thumb and extension of 2 while playing (pattern IIIa)
2) Flexion/adduction of the thumb and flexion of 2 while writing, producing a pincer-like posture of the thumb and index finger holding the pen (pattern IIIb)
3) Flexion of the thumb (particularly the distal phalanx) while playing (pattern IIIc)
4) Hybrid banjo/guitar, extension of the thumb and flexion/adduction of 2 while playing (pattern IIId)
5) Banjo player, dystonic extension of the thumb while playing (pattern IIIe)

G4 - Proximal
1) Pianist, isolated extension of the wrist as soon as his left hand touches the keyboard (pattern Va)
2) Guitarist, pronation of the wrist, which spread to the task of writing (pattern Vb)
3) Tennis coach, wrist flexion dystonia which spread to occur when he held his arms up (pattern Vc)
4) Percussionist, ulnar deviation of the left wrist while playing with “soft mallets” in a fast roll (pattern Vd)
5) Violinist, subtle loss of vibrato 2/2 biceps activation (VIa)
6) Violinist, dystonia of the bow arm (pattern VII)
*Botox injection
7) Athletics, dystonia of the throwing arm causes the ball to fly wildly off target (pattern EA)

Scales
-Tubiana & Chamagne Scale

Pathophysiology
-Maladaptive sensorimotor plasticity
-Power hand mismatch→ hand is evolutionarily designed to stabilize and exert force onto an object, rather than engaging in precision kinetics

Observations
-Manipulandum DTN→ instrument-specific
-Overflow DTN→ spread to adjacent muscles
-Can progress from focal→ segmental DTN
>Initially task‑specific, but may lose task specificity
-High spread risk in woodwind players (speech/swallowing involvement)

Differential Dx
-Overuse syndromes
-Entrapment neuropathies (e.g., ulnar neuropathy)
>Neuropathy may coexist but is rarely the primary cause
-Functional movement disorder

Treatment Options
-Non-pharm
>Pedagogical: relearning, changing technique, temporary switch
>Sensory: glove
>Constrain-induced technique

-Botox
>US-guided, selective
>Low-doses

-TMS: transient effects, not durable

-Surgery:
>VoA thalamotomy (Japan reports benefit)
>DBS: experimental, protocol-driven only

Theta wave

Theta wave

Definitions
-Theta frequency: 4–7 Hz
-Theta rhythm: sustained, regular 4–7 Hz oscillation
-Theta activity: any waveform in the 4–7 Hz range, rhythmic or not

Morphology
-Rounded, smooth waveforms
-Broader than alpha
-Less sharply contoured than beta
-Amplitude: 20–100 μV

Neurophysiology
-Generated by cortical and hippocampal networks
-Modulated by 
>Cholinergic input via the ARAS
>Thalamocortical circuits
>Hippocampal oscillations

-Hippocampal theta
>Long‑term potentiation
>Memory encoding & consolidation
>Spatial navigation

Physiological
-N1 sleep
-Drowsiness
>Inc drowsy, dec alert
>Assess reactivity, non‑reactive theta→ c/f encephalopathy
-Meditation / internal attention
-Normal infant EEG (bilateral polymorphic theta)
-Young individuals during syncope
-Centroparietal rhythmic theta (“drowsy syndrome”)

Topographic interpretation
-Frontal theta
>Common in drowsiness
>Excess→ metabolic encephalopathy

-Temporal theta
>Intermittent → benign
>Persistent/asymmetric → structural

-Posterior theta
>Slowed PDR
>Diffuse cortical dysfunction

Clinical correlates
-Persistent gen polymorph theta (adults)→ diffuse cerebral dysfunction
-Dominant theta background in severe illness→ “theta coma”
-Focal persistent theta→ subcortical structural lesion
-Excess theta in elderly→ dementia syndromes
-High‑amplitude theta bursts→ narcolepsy

Medication‑Related Theta
-Sedation: bzd, barbiturates, ASMs
-Typical features: diffuse, symmetric, non‑focal

Age‑Dependent Interpretation
-Children/adolescents
>Theta may dominate waking EEG

-Adults
>Persistent waking theta is abnormal

-Elderly
>Mild theta may be age‑related
>Excess→ neurodegeneration

BEVs
-RMTD
-Midline Theta (Ciganek Rhythm)

qEEG
-Inc theta assoc w/ cognitive slow, red attention, executive dysfx
-Frontal theta excess assoc w/ dementia, TBI, ADHD

Cranial Nerve 0

Cranial Nerve 0 (Terminal Nerve)
Definition
-Collection of microscopic nerve fibers found on the ventral surface of the frontal lobe, close to the olfactory tract

Discovery
-1st described by Felix Pinkus (1913)

Anatomical Course
-Originates from neurons in the nasal mucosa
-Fibers pass through the cribriform plate
-Terminate in areas of the forebrain, especially the hypothalamus and septal nuclei

Functions
-Pheromone detection, sexual behavior
>Terminal nerve provides a direct pathway between nasal cavity & hypothalamic reproductive centers, bypassing classical olfactory circuits
-Reproductive, neurons related to GnRH
-Modulation of autonomic & limbic activity

Clinical Significance
-Developmentally related to migration of GnRH neurons
>Abnormality may lead Kallmann syndrome

Why It Is Called “Cranial Nerve Zero”
-Lies ant to CN I

Important Characteristics
-Very thin and microscopic
-Present in humans and many vertebrates
-Often not visible in routine gross dissection