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Primary Care Live Neurology

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Most common headaches are tension-type headache (TTH), migraine ... Cerebrovascular Vertebrobasilar TIA, posterior fossa CVA, migraine. Psychogenic. Red Flags ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Primary Care Live Neurology


1
Primary Care Live -Neurology
  • Dr Estelle McFadden
  • MBChB, MRCP, MRCGP
  • GPwSI, Bradford

2
Headaches www.mipca.org.uk
3
Why is this important?
  • Prevalence of headache is very high (96)
  • Most common headaches are tension-type headache
    (TTH), migraine and chronic primary headaches
  • Migraine is associated with high economic costs
  • Headaches are a frequent reason for GP
    consultation
  • However, migraine is under-diagnosed and
    under-treated in the UK

4
What should I already know about this condition?
  • Most headaches are benign
  • Migraine can occur with or without an aura
  • Chronic primary headaches usually evolve from
    episodic headaches (migraine or TTH)
  • Differential diagnosis of TTH, migraine, chronic
    primary headaches and cluster headache
  • Types of secondary (sinister) headaches and
    diagnostic features (RED FLAGS)

5
What new evidence so I need to know about?
  • Features of medication overuse headache (MOH)
  • Topiramate is an effective and generally well
    tolerated new preventive drug for migraine

6
Practical management tips
  • Seven step process for managing headache
  • Screening
  • Patient education and eliciting commitment
  • Differential diagnosis
  • Assessment of illness severity
  • Tailoring management to the needs of the
    individual patient
  • Proactive, long-term follow up
  • A team approach to care

7
When should I refer my patient?
  • lt5 years or gt60 years
  • New-onset or acute headaches
  • Single, sudden severe headache
  • Progressive headaches
  • History of cancer
  • Symptoms rash, non-resolving neurological
    deficit, vomiting outside of the headache, scalp
    pain/tenderness, accident/head injury, infection,
    worrisome hypertension
  • Uncertain diagnosis
  • Refractory to repeated acute and preventive
    treatments
  • Very anxious despite reassurance

8
Commonly asked questions
  • Will my patient benefit from having a scan, even
    if I do not think there is intracranial pathology?

9
Common pitfalls
  • Misdiagnosing chronic headache as migraine
  • Over-treating chronic headaches leading to MOH
  • Under-treating migraine relying on analgesics
  • Missing unusual primary headache variants
  • Blaming headaches solely on stress

10
Important messages
  • Most headaches can be managed effectively in
    primary care
  • Headaches are a major cause of morbidity
  • Specific management of headaches can help

11
Epilepsy
12
Principles of epidemiology
  • Incidence rate new cases per year n per
    100,000 per year
  • For epilepsy is around 50 per 100,000
  • Point prevalence All cases with active epilepsy
    at a point in time n per 1000.
  • For epilepsy is 4-7 per 1000
  • Active epilepsy to have had a seizure or
    treatment in the last 5 yrs

13
Epilepsy seizure types
  • Focal Seizures
  • 60 of epilepsy
  • Focal Cortical Disturbance
  • Their origin usually determines the clinical
    picture
  • Focal Spikes on EEG
  • Primary Generalised Seizures
  • Origin unclear either sleep spindles or
    hyper-synchrony
  • Commence bilaterally
  • Spike and wave
  • No aura

14
Focal epilepsy the site of the focus determines
the seizure morphology
15
Focal vs Primary Generalised Epilepsy
  • Focal Epilepsy
  • Aura
  • Simple Sz.s
  • Complex Partial Szs
  • Secondary Generalised Sz.s
  • P.G.E.
  • Myoclonic Jerks
  • Absence
  • Atonic Szs
  • Tonic Szs
  • Tonic-clonic Sz.s

16
Mortality in epilepsy
  • Up to 1000 deaths a year.
  • 20 more men than women. No change in figures for
    over a decade
  • SUDEP 350-400 a yr in the UK
  • Possible cardiac arrhythmias caused by
    channelopathies, bradycardia 2 to apnoea,
    endogenous opioids/endorphins
  • External obstruction likely to be a factor in up
    to 70
  • May effect up to 1 per 1000 with epilepsy
  • 1 per 250 attending a tertiary epilepsy clinic
  • If seizures are fully controlled, SMR falls to
    close to normal for the population
  • Has been studied in small numbers one was
    during video telemetry

17
Epilepsy is not just about seizures
  • Social implications are varied and very much lie
    within the remit of General Practice e.g. the
    impact of epilepsy on sexuality
  • Hypo sexuality. Surveys suggest 22-67 reduction
    in sexual interest
  • Erectile dysfunction occurs in 57 Toone et al
    1989, up to 83 in TLE
  • Sexual Functioning in Males 1989
  • Previous SI 56 compared to 98 controls
  • S.I. in the previous month 43 compared to 91
    in controls
  • Previous erectile dysfunction 57 compared to
    18 controls

18
Psychosocial impact of epilepsy
  • Psychiatric
  • Depression Up to 2/3 of PWE are depressed, with
    2 reduced libido and effects of antidepressants
  • Anxiety self medicate with alcohol
  • Psychosocial
  • In one study 1988 of 92 patients with poorly
    controlled epilepsy
  • 68 Had no friends
  • 34 Never had a true friendship
  • 57 Never had a steady relationship

19
Dizziness the management of vertigo the
illusion of movement
20
The Labyrinth
  • NB vertigo is perceived by the brain
  • Mismatch of visual, vestibular
    proprioceptive cues
  • Abnormality of central vestibular processing

21
Epidemiology
  • 6-25 UK population complain of dizziness at some
    point
  • After viral vestibular neuronitis (idiopathic)
    benign paroxysmal positional vertigo is most
    common cause

22
VertigoDifferential diagnosis for acute onset
of first attack cardiac or brain or ear
  • Viral vestibular neuronitis (idiopathic)
  • common, usually self limiting
  • acute
  • symptomatic management with rest, avoidance of
    provocative manoeuvres, short course of
    vestibular sedatives
  • Benign Paroxysmal Positional Vertigo
  • Increase physical activity, Epley, precipitate
    vertigo, core stability muscle
  • activity
  • Iatrogenic, e.g. diuretics
  • Cardiovascular, Hypotension, Myocardial
    Infarction, Cardiac dysrhythmia
  • Cerebrovascular Vertebrobasilar TIA, posterior
    fossa CVA, migraine
  • Psychogenic

23
Red Flags
  • If history inadequate
  • Presume cardiovascular till proven otherwise
  • ECG, cardiac enzymes, cardiac monitor, ECHO, tilt
    table, carotid sinus massage
  • If cardiac symptoms present before, during or
    after arrange cardiac tests especially while
    symptomatic
  • Altered consciousness, behavioural change
  • Exclude epilepsy
  • Exclude cardiac/cardiovascular causes
  • The Blackouts Checklist (refs)
  • Vomiting

24
Vertigo and the neck
  • Compression of vertebral arteries expect
    multiple neurological symptoms tinnitus
    hearing loss
  • very rare cause of recurrent vertigo
  • Carotid sinus hypersensitivity
  • Relatively common, but causes falls NOT vertigo
  • Cervicogenic vertigo proprioceptive
    dysfunction desensitization to neck
    stimuli vestibular failure
  • Not common

25
Nystagmus
  • Transient Positional nystagmus WITH vertigo
    think BPV
  • Positional nystagmus NO vertigo brain stem
    lesion
  • If present when patient sitting up
  • Usually indicates cerebellar involvement
  • Rarely present with ACUTE peripheral vestibular
    lesion
  • Viral labyrinthitis first 1-3 days
  • During attack of Menieres, migraine-associated
    vertigo

  • (positional laying back)

26
Benign Positional Vertigo
  • Diagnosed ONLY by the Hallpike manoeuvre or by
    the lateral canal manoeuvre
  • Must be performed in the acute phase
  • Curative manoeuvres
  • Epley
  • Barrel

27
Epley manoeuvre and Barrel manoeuvre
Positional manoeuvres move debris around the
semicircular canals (diameter 0.3 mm) back to the
utricule
28
Hallpike manoeuvre 1-2 Epley manoeuvre 1-6
gt 30 s in each position
1
2
3
4
5
6
29
The best policy A team approach
  • General practice, elderly medicine, neurology,
    cardiology, audiological medicine
  • Rehabilitation team physiotherapy, cognitive
    behaviour therapy, occupational therapy, exercise
    therapy, activities in the community
  • Open access to Audiological Physician by patients
    already seen to finalise diagnosis and expedite
    treatment

30
Web links
  • www.vestibular.org website of vestibular
    disorders association
  • www.dizziness-and-balance.com
  • Google - images Epley
  • www.youtube.com
  • Epley manoeuvre
  • www.stars.org.uk
  • The Blackouts Checklist

31
Transient ischaemic attacks
32
Definition
  • Transient ischaemic attack (TIA) is defined as an
    acute loss of focal cerebral or ocular function
    with symptoms lasting less than 24 hours and
    which is thought to be due to inadequate cerebral
    or ocular blood supply as a result of low blood
    flow, thrombosis, or embolism associated with
    diseases of the blood vessels, heart, or blood
    (Hankey and Warlow 1994)

33
TIA or stroke?
  • Brief episode of rapidly developing neurological
    dysfunction with no apparent cause other than of
    vascular origin with symptoms resolving
    completely within 24 hours
  • MR scans have shown that those with symptoms
    lasting more than 1 hour show cerebral infarction
    i.e. a stroke
  • Definition may be changed to symptoms resolving
    completely within 1 hour
  • TIA is the only warning that a stroke is imminent
  • Estimated 30,000 new TIAs per year

34
Risk of stroke following TIA
  • Most patients who have a TIA have a short benign
    course but up to 20 will have a stroke within
    the next 90 days
  • Half of those who will have a stroke will do so
    in the first seven days after their TIA
  • (Coull A, Lovett JK Rothwell PM on behalf of
    the Oxofrd VAscualr Study, 2004, Early risk of
    stroke after a TIA or minor stroke in
    population-based incidence study, BMJ, 328,
    326-8)
  • Risk of a stroke following a TIA varies
  • ABCD2 risk stratification tool helps identify
    those at highest risk of a stroke
  • (Johnston SC, Rothwell PM et al The Lancet 2007
    (369) 283-292)

35
ABCD2 score to identify individuals with high
early risk of stroke after TIA
36
Risk of stroke following TIA
  • HIGH Score 6-7 8.1 2 day risk
  • MODERATE Score 4-5 4.1 2 day risk
  • LOW Score 0-3 1.0 2 day risk
  • More than one TIA in seven days also at high risk
    of stroke

37
Presentation of TIA
38
Management of TIAurgent medical admission
  • As TIA is a retrospective diagnosis then if they
    are symptomatic at the time of presentation then
    refer for emergency admission to an acute stroke
    unit
  • In a centre offering thrombolysis, those still
    symptomatic at 3 hours may be eligible for
    thrombolysis

39
Management of TIA High risk
  • High risk of subsequent stroke in lt 2 days if
  • ABCD2 score 4
  • More than one TIA in seven days
  • Require assessment and treatment within 24 hours
  • ?admit as urgent medical admission
  • Refer to rapid access neurovascular clinic, one
    stop shop with strong advice to seek urgent
    medical referral (via 999) in the event of
    symptoms returning or new symptoms i.e. develop a
    stroke AND give 300mg aspirin if not already on
    regular aspirin
  • To be treated or referred if presenting to Out Of
    Hours services or AE (not referred back to GP)

40
Management of TIA Low risk
  • All other TIAs
  • Should be given 300mg aspirin (if not taking
    regular aspirin already)
  • Those attending out of hours must be treated and
    not referred back to their GP to avoid delays
  • Need prompt referral to a rapid access
    neurovascular clinic (referrals for TIA are
    excluded from Choose and Book as considered to be
    a medical emergency) and to be seen within SEVEN
    days
  • UNLESS
  • Presenting several weeks after event (still
    refer)
  • Treatment not felt to be in patients best
    interest e.g. bed bound with dementia

41
Assessment of TIA
  • Carotid imaging should be performed at initial
    assessment (and not delayed for more than 24
    hours in high risk patients and those with
    carotid territory minor stroke)
  • Doppler ultrasound
  • MR including angiography, diffusion weighted
    imaging, gradient echo imaging
  • CT
  • Where indicated
  • ECG
  • Echocardiogram

42
Treatment of TIA
  • Carotid endarterectomy for gt70 stenosis
  • Recommendation this becomes a surgical emergency
  • Stroke prevention benefits lost if treatment
    delayed
  • Should be performed within
  • 48 hours in high risk patient
  • 28 days to prevent stroke
  • Atrial fibrillation and other arrhythmias
  • Anticoagulation unless contra-indications
  • Aspirin 75 300mg daily
  • Treatment of arrhythmia

43
Secondary prevention
  • Antiplatelet
  • Aspirin 75mg 300mg plus dipyridamole MR 200mg
    bd for 2 years following event then aspirin alone
  • Clopidogrel alone if aspirin intolerance or
    sensitivity
  • Anticoagulation
  • Anticoagulant if arrhythmia unless
    contraindication (high risk of falls, recent GI
    bleed)

44
Secondary prevention
  • Hypertension
  • Risk of stroke halves with every 10mmHg fall in
    diastolic blood pressure even in normotensive
    patients
  • Cholesterol
  • Equal benefit of simvastatin 40mg across all
    those who had had a stroke or TIA down to
    baseline 3.5mmol/l total cholesterol

45
Lifestyle advice
  • Smoking cessation
  • Alcohol intake
  • Binge drinking associated with increase in blood
    pressure
  • Exercise
  • Obesity
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