Schwannoma physical examination
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Shanshan Cen, M.D. [2]
Overview
Common physical examination findings of schwannoma include focal neurological deficits, impaired hearing, and paralysis.[1]
Physical Examination
- Focal neurological deficits,
hypoesthesia, aphasia, ataxia, impaired hearing, facial paralysis, double vision, dizziness, paralysis on one side of the body hemiplegia or impairment in swallowing
- Changes that affect touch and the ability to feel pain, pressure, different temperatures, or other stimuli[1]
HEENT
- Papilledema on fundoscopic examination
Neuromuscular
- Patient is usually oriented to persons, place, and time
- Altered mental status
- Glasgow coma scale is ___ / 15
- Clonus may be present
- Hyperreflexia / hyporeflexia / areflexia
- Positive (abnormal) Babinski / plantar reflex unilaterally/bilaterally
- Muscle rigidity
- Proximal/distal muscle weakness unilaterally/bilaterally
- ____ (finding) suggestive of cranial nerve ___ (roman numerical) deficit (e.g. Dilated pupils suggestive of CN III deficit)
- Unilateral/bilateral upper/lower extremity weakness
- Unilateral/bilateral sensory loss in the upper/lower extremity
- Positive straight leg raise test
- Abnormal gait (describe gait: e.g. ataxic (cerebellar) gait / steppage gait / waddling gait / choeiform gait / Parkinsonian gait / sensory gait)
- Positive/negative Trendelenburg sign
- Unilateral/bilateral tremor (describe tremor, e.g. at rest, pill-rolling)
- Normal finger-to-nose test / Dysmetria
- Absent/present dysdiadochokinesia (palm tapping test)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 National Library of Medicine.http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/cancer.html