Exam
Right Hemiplegia
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Right Hemiplegia
, Right Hemiparesis
Background
Left hemisphere usually dominant for speech
Nearly all right hand dominant patients
Most left hand dominant patients
Right Hemiplegia differs from
Left Hemiplegia
Cortical function only
Subcortical,
Brainstem
and spinal cord are the same
Symptoms
Right sided weakness or paralysis
Seizure
in distribution of weakness
Signs
Left Cortical Lesion
Aphasia
Object Naming (pen, watch, tie)
Repeat sentence ("no ifs ands or buts")
Reading and comprehension of a magazine article
Aphasic errors on spontaneous speech
Cortical sensory loss
Position sense
Point localization
Stereognosis
Graphesthesia
Distribution of deficit
Right face and arm most affected
Middle Cerebral Artery CVA
Right leg more involved
Anterior Cerebral Artery CVA
Eye Deviation
look left in cortical Right Hemiplegia
Eyes look at involved hemisphere
Eyes look away from the
Hemiparesis
Visual Field Deficit
(also seen in subcortical lesion)
Signs
Left Subcortical Lesion
Involved regions
Internal Capsule
Basal Ganglia
(
Globus Pallidus
,
Putamen
)
Thalamus
Right face, arm and leg equally affected
Suggests
Internal Capsule
lesion
Dystonic
Posture
s
Suggests
Basal Ganglia
lesions
Dense sensory loss on right side
Pain and
Touch Sensation
lost in face and extremities
Suggests thalamic lesion
Visual Field Deficit
(also seen in cortical lesions)
Signs
Left
Brainstem
Crossed
Hemiplegia
Left-sided dysmetria
Left
Cranial Nerve
palsy at level of lesion
Cerebellar signs
Left Finger to nose
Ataxia
Difficult
Rapid Alternating Movements
of left hand
Difficult heel-
Toe Walk
ing (
Tandem Walk
ing)
Left foot clumsy
Nystagmus
on looking toward the lesion (left)
Left ear
Hearing Loss
Sensory loss
Left face sensory loss (descending
CN 5
)
Loss of left pain and
Temperature
Sensation
Loss of left
Corneal Reflex
Right body sensory loss
Loss of right extremity pain and
Temperature
sense
Dysarthria
and
Dysphagia
Distinguish from Pseudobulbar palsy (higher lesion)
Abnormal eye movements
Difficulty gazing left
Left eye difficulty crossing midline to look right
Tongue
deviation to left past midline (Left
CN 12
)
Right hypoglossus
Muscle
overpowers weak left
Muscle
Signs
Right Spinal cord lesion
Face is not involved
Cranial Nerve
s are not involved
Right sided paralysis
Left
Temperature
and pain sense loss
Brown-Sequard Syndrome
Sensory Level
may be identified
Bladder
or bowel dysfunction
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