Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 10 , Pages 509-514, October 2008

Taking a neurological history

Angus Kennedy MD MRCP is Consultant Neurologist at Charing Cross Hospital, and Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, UK. His interests include the diagnosis, investigation and management of degenerative dementia. Competing interests: none declared

Rasheed Zakaria MA BMBCh is a House Officer at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, London, UK. He qualified from Cambridge University, and Oxford University, winning the prestigious Geoffrey Spray Hill prize. Competing interests: none declared

Abstract 

Obtaining a detailed neurological history will allow the physician to determine where the lesion is in the nervous system, what the nature of the pathological process is and which physical signs to seek on examination. The ability to take a neurological history depends on basic knowledge of the hierarchal organization of the nervous system and the principles of functional localization. Characterizing the pattern of neurological disease over time is important for management. Episodic, fluctuating and progressive courses of symptoms are the most common. For an episodic condition one needs to determine clearly the events before, during and after an episode. Obtaining a history from an eyewitness may be necessary. Different symptom complexes may point the clinician towards cortical, extrapyramidal, spinal, radicular, peripheral nerve and neuromuscular pathologies. These presentations are discussed.

Keywords: assessment, examination, history, neurological symptoms, neurology

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PII: S1357-3039(08)00218-1

doi:10.1016/j.mpmed.2008.07.016

Medicine
Volume 36, Issue 10 , Pages 509-514, October 2008