Internal Medicine Glossary

A

  • Altered Level of Consciousness (ALOC)

    • Definition: Any deviation from normal alertness, ranging from lethargy to coma.

    • Causes: Metabolic (hypoglycemia, hepatic encephalopathy), infections (meningitis, encephalitis), structural (stroke, trauma), toxins.

    • Clinical tip: Document onset, progression, associated symptoms, and response to stimuli.

  • Ataxia

    • Definition: Lack of voluntary coordination of muscle movements.

    • Causes: Cerebellar lesions, vestibular disorders, sensory neuropathies, intoxications.

    • History point: Onset (acute vs chronic), progression, associated dizziness or weakness.


B

  • Bell’s Palsy

    • Definition: Acute unilateral facial nerve (CN VII) paralysis.

    • History features: Sudden onset facial weakness, inability to close eye, loss of taste anterior 2/3 tongue.

    • Important: Differentiate from stroke by involvement of forehead muscles.

  • Babinski Sign (History relevance)

    • Note: While a physical exam finding, ask about symptoms suggesting upper motor neuron lesions like spasticity or weakness.


C

  • Cranial Nerve Deficits

    • History clues: Diplopia, facial numbness, hearing loss, dysphagia, hoarseness.

    • Common causes: Stroke, multiple sclerosis, tumors, infections.

  • Confusion

    • Definition: Disorientation to time, place, or person.

    • Causes: Delirium (infections, metabolic derangements), dementia, intoxication.

  • Convulsions (Seizures)

    • History: Type (generalized vs focal), aura, duration, post-ictal state, triggers.

    • Differential: Epilepsy, metabolic disturbances, structural brain lesions, infections.


D

  • Dizziness

    • Definition: Sensation of spinning (vertigo) or lightheadedness.

    • Vertigo causes: Vestibular neuritis, Meniere’s disease, stroke.

    • Presyncope causes: Cardiac arrhythmias, orthostatic hypotension.

  • Diplopia

    • Definition: Double vision.

    • Causes: Cranial nerve palsies, myasthenia gravis, brainstem lesions.

  • Dysarthria

    • Definition: Difficulty articulating speech due to motor dysfunction.

    • Associated disorders: Stroke, Parkinson’s disease, motor neuron disease.

  • Dysphagia

    • Definition: Difficulty swallowing.

    • Neurological causes: Stroke, myasthenia gravis, ALS, brainstem lesions.


E

  • Extrapyramidal Symptoms

    • History clues: Tremors, rigidity, bradykinesia, postural instability.

    • Common diseases: Parkinson’s disease, drug-induced parkinsonism.

  • Emotional Lability

    • Description: Involuntary or inappropriate emotional expression.

    • Seen in: Stroke, traumatic brain injury, pseudobulbar palsy.


F

  • Fasciculations

    • Definition: Involuntary muscle twitches.

    • Significance: Suggest lower motor neuron disease (e.g., ALS).

  • Focal Weakness

    • History: Onset, progression, associated sensory or cranial nerve symptoms.

    • Causes: Stroke, tumor, demyelination.


G

  • Gait Disturbance

    • Types: Ataxic, spastic, parkinsonian, hemiplegic.

    • History points: Duration, progression, associated symptoms like falls or sensory loss.


H

  • Headache

    • History: Onset (sudden vs gradual), quality, location, duration, frequency, associated symptoms (visual changes, nausea, neurological deficits).

    • Red flags: Thunderclap headache, worsening pattern, neurological signs (may indicate hemorrhage, tumor, meningitis).

  • Hemiparesis

    • Definition: Weakness affecting one side of the body.

    • Common causes: Stroke, brain tumors, multiple sclerosis.

  • Hypoesthesia

    • Definition: Reduced sensation.

    • Causes: Peripheral neuropathy, spinal cord lesions.


I

  • Involuntary Movements

    • Types: Tremor, chorea, athetosis, myoclonus.

    • Disorders: Huntington’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, metabolic causes.

  • Imbalance

    • Distinguish: Vestibular vs proprioceptive causes.


L

  • Lethargy

    • Definition: Decreased alertness and energy.

    • Causes: Infection, metabolic disorders, CNS injury.

  • Lightheadedness

    • Often due to cardiovascular causes but may overlap with neurological dizziness.


M

  • Memory Loss

    • History: Onset, progression, types of memory affected (short-term vs long-term).

    • Causes: Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia, depression.

  • Muscle Weakness

    • Details: Distribution (proximal/distal), symmetry, associated muscle pain or wasting.


N

  • Numbness

    • Description: Loss of sensation or abnormal sensations like tingling.

    • Causes: Peripheral neuropathy, radiculopathy, CNS lesions.

  • Nystagmus

    • History: Onset, triggers (head movement), associated vertigo.

    • Causes: Vestibular disorders, brainstem pathology.


P

  • Paresthesia

    • Definition: Abnormal sensations such as tingling or pins and needles.

    • Causes: Peripheral nerve injury, vitamin deficiencies, multiple sclerosis.

  • Paralysis

    • Complete loss of muscle function.

    • Differentiate upper vs lower motor neuron signs.

  • Personality Changes

    • Associated with: Frontal lobe lesions, dementia, psychiatric disorders.

  • Photophobia

    • Light sensitivity, common in meningitis and migraine.


R

  • Restlessness

    • May indicate discomfort, medication side effects, or neurological agitation.

  • Rigidity

    • Increased muscle tone seen in extrapyramidal disorders.


S

  • Seizures

    • See convulsions.

  • Syncope

    • Transient loss of consciousness due to cerebral hypoperfusion; neurological vs cardiac causes.

  • Speech Disturbances

    • Includes aphasia (language impairment), dysarthria.

  • Sensory Loss

    • Complete or partial loss; important to localize lesion.


T

  • Tremor

    • Types: Resting (Parkinsonian), intention (cerebellar), essential.

    • History: Onset, progression, family history.

  • Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA)

    • Brief neurological dysfunction without infarction.

    • History: Sudden onset focal symptoms resolving within 24 hours.


V

  • Vertigo

    • See dizziness.

  • Visual Disturbances

    • Types: Blurring, diplopia, vision loss.

    • Causes: Optic neuritis, stroke, increased intracranial pressure.


Additional History Tips

  • Chronology: Onset (sudden vs gradual), progression, frequency (episodic vs continuous).

  • Triggers and Relievers: Physical activity, stress, medications.

  • Associated systemic symptoms: Fever, weight loss, rash (may indicate infections or autoimmune).

  • Functional impact: Falls, difficulties with daily activities, cognitive changes.

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