18 Mar NURS 6501 Advanced Pathophysiology – Module 2: Neurological System (Week 3) Study Notes
Topics: Pathophysiology of Neurological Disorders (e.g., Stroke, Seizures, Neurodegenerative Diseases) Module Overview: Module 2 (Week 3) shifts from foundational cellular/genetic concepts to organ-system specific pathophysiology, focusing on the neurological system. Emphasis is on understanding normal neurological function, disruptions leading to disorders, compensatory mechanisms, and clinical manifestations across the lifespan. This prepares for application in case studies, discussions (often pain-focused in Week 3), and knowledge checks/quizzes.Primary Textbook Reference: McCance, K. L., & Huether, S. E. (Latest edition, e.g., 9th). Pathophysiology: The Biologic Basis for Disease in Adults and Children. Elsevier. Key Chapters: Typically Chapter 16 (Structure and Function of the Neurologic System), Chapter 17 (Alterations in Cognitive Systems, Cerebral Hemodynamics, and Motor Function), Chapter 18 (Disorders of the Central and Peripheral Nervous Systems and the Neuromuscular Junction), and related sections on pain (Chapter 13 or similar).
Learning Objectives (Typical for Week 3): Analyze pathophysiological processes in neurological disorders.
Differentiate mechanisms of stroke (ischemic vs. hemorrhagic), seizures, and neurodegenerative conditions.
Evaluate compensatory responses (e.g., neuroplasticity, collateral circulation).
Link alterations to clinical symptoms and implications for advanced practice nursing.
1. Normal Neurological Structure and Function (Review Basics)Central Nervous System (CNS): Brain (cerebrum, cerebellum, brainstem) and spinal cord.
Peripheral Nervous System (PNS): Somatic (voluntary) and autonomic (sympathetic/parasympathetic).
Neurons: Structure (dendrites, axon, myelin sheath via Schwann cells in PNS/Oligodendrocytes in CNS), action potentials, synapses (chemical: neurotransmitters like ACh, dopamine, GABA, glutamate).
Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB): Protects CNS from toxins; formed by tight junctions in capillaries.
Cerebral Hemodynamics: Autoregulation maintains constant blood flow (MAP 60–160 mmHg); cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP = MAP – ICP).
2. Stroke (Cerebrovascular Accident – CVA)Definition: Sudden interruption of blood flow to brain → neuronal ischemia/infarction. Leading cause of disability.
Types and Pathophysiology: Ischemic Stroke (~87%): Thrombotic (atherosclerosis → clot in vessel) or embolic (clot from heart/atria → MCA common). Mechanism: Reduced perfusion → ATP depletion → Na+/K+ pump failure → cytotoxic edema → excitotoxicity (glutamate excess → Ca2+ influx → cell death).
Penumbra: Salvageable tissue around core infarct (time-sensitive for thrombolysis).
Hemorrhagic Stroke (~13%): Intracerebral (hypertension → vessel rupture) or subarachnoid (aneurysm rupture). Mechanism: Bleeding → increased ICP → mass effect → herniation risk; vasospasm in SAH.
Risk Factors: Hypertension (major), atrial fibrillation, diabetes, smoking, hyperlipidemia.
Clinical Manifestations: FAST (Face drooping, Arm weakness, Speech difficulty, Time); hemiparesis, aphasia, visual field deficits.
Compensatory Responses: Collateral circulation (circle of Willis), neuroplasticity.
Nursing Implications: Time-critical interventions (tPA within 4.5 hrs for ischemic), BP management, secondary prevention (antiplatelets, statins).
3. Seizures and EpilepsyDefinition: Seizure = sudden, transient alteration in brain function from abnormal, excessive neuronal discharge. Epilepsy = recurrent unprovoked seizures.
Pathophysiology: Imbalance excitation (glutamate) vs. inhibition (GABA).
Triggers: Hypoxia, hypoglycemia, toxins, trauma, infection, genetic (e.g., channelopathies).
Focal (partial): Originates in one hemisphere; simple (consciousness intact) vs. complex (impaired consciousness).
Generalized: Involves both hemispheres from onset; tonic-clonic (grand mal), absence (petit mal), myoclonic.
Status epilepticus: Prolonged/repeated seizures → excitotoxicity, neuronal damage.
Mechanisms: Kindling (repeated subthreshold stimuli lower seizure threshold), hippocampal sclerosis in temporal lobe epilepsy.
Clinical Manifestations: Aura, motor convulsions, postictal confusion.
Nursing Implications: Safety during seizure, AED adherence (e.g., phenytoin, levetiracetam), identify triggers, status epilepticus emergency (lorazepam, then phenytoin).
4. Neurodegenerative DiseasesAlzheimer’s Disease (AD): Most common dementia. Pathophysiology: Amyloid-beta plaques (extracellular), neurofibrillary tangles (tau protein intracellular), cholinergic deficit (nucleus basalis loss), cortical atrophy (hippocampus/entorhinal cortex first).
Genetics: APOE ε4 risk allele; rare familial (APP, PSEN1/2 mutations).
Progression: Mild cognitive impairment → memory loss → global decline.
Parkinson’s Disease (PD): Movement disorder. Pathophysiology: Dopamine neuron loss in substantia nigra pars compacta → Lewy bodies (alpha-synuclein).
Imbalance: Reduced dopamine in basal ganglia → bradykinesia, rigidity, tremor, postural instability.
Non-motor: Depression, REM sleep behavior disorder.
Other (Brief): Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) – motor neuron degeneration (upper/lower); Huntington’s – CAG repeats in HTT gene → chorea, dementia.
Common Themes: Protein misfolding/aggregation, oxidative stress, inflammation, mitochondrial dysfunction, excitotoxicity.
Nursing Implications: Symptom management (cholinesterase inhibitors for AD, levodopa for PD), safety (falls), caregiver support, palliative care.
5. Additional Neurological Topics Often CoveredIncreased Intracranial Pressure (ICP): Cushing’s triad (hypertension, bradycardia, irregular respirations).
Pain Pathophysiology (often Week 3 discussion focus): Nociception (transduction, transmission, modulation, perception); acute vs. chronic (central/peripheral sensitization); referred pain.
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI): Primary (direct) vs. secondary (edema, ischemia) injury.
Week 3 Graded Elements (Typical)Discussion: Often “Pain” – compare acute, chronic, referred pain pathophysiology; impact of factors (genetics, age, etc.).
Knowledge Check/Quiz: 5–10 questions on neurological disorders (e.g., stroke types, seizure classifications, AD pathology).
Assignment: Concept map or case study prep (major neuro/MS case studies often in later weeks, e.g., Module 5).
Study Strategies: Tables: Compare ischemic vs. hemorrhagic stroke; focal vs. generalized seizures; AD vs. PD pathology.
Diagrams: Brain regions affected (e.g., MCA territory in stroke), basal ganglia in PD.
Mnemonics: FAST for stroke; TRAP (tremor, rigidity, akinesia, postural instability) for PD.
Apply to scenarios: Link symptoms to mechanisms (e.g., hemiparesis from corticospinal tract damage in stroke).
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