The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Neurology

Authors: Flaherty, Alice W.; Rost, Natalia S.

Title: Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Neurology, The, 2nd Edition

Copyright 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

> Table of Contents > Adult Neurology > Weakness

Weakness

A. See also

Neuromuscular Disorders, p. 80.

B. Terminology

Paresis is partial; plegia or paralysis is complete.

C. H&P

Numbness, pain, distal vs. proximal, bowel and bladder function, injuries, diurnal or exercise-induced fluctuation, tone, reflexes, atrophy, fasciculations, etc.

Figure 14. Muscle strength grading.

D. Upper motor neuron (UMN) vs. lower motor neuron (LMN) weakness

Both may be flaccid initially, but UMN lesion (corticospinal, pyramidal) usually develops spasticity and hyperreflexia; reflexes should be depressed in LMN lesion. May see fasciculations in LMN lesion; EMG will show fibrillations only after a few weeks. Dexterity is preferentially affected by upper motor neuron corticospinal lesion.

E. Bulbar vs. pseudobulbar palsy

F. Hemiparesis

Ipsilateral arm and leg. Typically from corticospinal damage. Look for other signs (e.g., neglect, cranial nerve abnormalities) to localize further.

G. Monoparesis

Single limb. May have peripheral or central cause.

H. Paraparesis

Both legs. Usually spinal cord; look for sensory level. But consider falx meningioma or bilateral ACA infarcts.

I. Proximal, distal, or generalized weakness

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