need help with your account or subscription? click here to email us (or see the contact page)
join telegramNEW! discord
jump to exam page:
search for anything ⋅ score predictor (โ€œpredict me!โ€)

NBME Step 2 CK Form 6 Answers

step2ck_form6/Block 1/Question#36 (reveal difficulty score)
A 67-year-old man comes to the emergency ...
Right vertebral ๐Ÿ” / ๐Ÿ“บ / ๐ŸŒณ / ๐Ÿ“–
tags: Neuro DDX inc strokes

 Login (or register) to see more


 +7  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—sugaplum(487)
get full access to all contentpick a username

This question is tricky. I used to always miss this presentation. This is laterally medullary syndrome- which most of us have memorizes is a PICA infarct. Fun fact, PICA comes off the vertebral artery.

This is how I remember the sx. If this helps at least one person I will be glad I am exposing my twisted brain.

3+5=8 & 9-11 & B-P.

3: Horner's syndrome 5:spinal trigeminal- ipsi face pain and temp loss 8: vestibular signs, vertigo diplopia

9-11: Nucleus ambiguous, diminshed gag, dysphagia B: Cerebellar - inferior cerebellar peduncle, ipsi ataxia P: Contra pain and temp, cuz this shit was so painful to memorize I throw it to the other side.

get full access to all contentpick a username
ronabobonafofona  Thank you for this. +



 +1  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—step_prep7(71)
get full access to all contentpick a username
  • Crossed signs of decreased pinprick sensation over opposite sides of face and body = Pathology in the brainstem IPSILATERAL to side where face pinprick sensation is lost
  • Other aspects of patientโ€™s presentation are consistent with Wallenberg syndrome (stroke of lateral medulla), including vertigo, ataxia and weakness of the palate
  • Key idea: If patient with suspected brainstem stroke has symptoms that localize to nucleus ambiguus (motor vagal nucleus that when damaged can present as dysphagia, hoarseness, and dysarthria) then you are almost certainly dealing with a lateral medullary syndrome
  • Although lateral medullary syndrome most often associated with stroke/hemorrhage involving the Posterior Inferior Cerebellar artery (PICA), important to remember that the PICA comes off the vertebral artery (reason why vertebral dissections can present with lateral medullary syndrome)
https://step-prep.org/tutoring/
get full access to all contentpick a username



 +0  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—keyseph(99)
get full access to all contentpick a username

Clinical picture sounds a lot like Wallenberg syndrome, which is classically due to posterior inferior cerebellar artery involvement leading to lateral medullary ischemia.

HOWEVER, vertebral artery dissection is another cause of Wallenberg syndrome and was also covered in one of the UWORLD questions with a similar presentation.

get full access to all contentpick a username



 -1  upvote downvote
submitted by โˆ—jlbae(159)
get full access to all contentpick a username

From. the man, the myth, the legend - Dr. Ryan https://d1yboe6750e2cu.cloudfront.net/i/e9f7093da7ea75eafd19ab63669f9fc07d868e14 https://d1yboe6750e2cu.cloudfront.net/i/1e7ee9f42ffdeddfc37e0384006bf153c1a5788c

get full access to all contentpick a username
jlbae  Right-sided palatal weakness (CN 9&10) are tips that this as somewhere in the right medulla. Facial sensation loss (CN 5) tells us that this is a lateral lesion. Only possible answers are Right PICA or Right Vertebral. https://www.biostasis.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/circle_of_willis-1024x623.jpg +1



Must-See Comments from step2ck_form6

szsnikaa on Germinal cell tumor
qfever on Glycogen storage disease, type II (Pompe's ...
sugaplum on Observation in the emergency department
sugaplum on Right vertebral
sugaplum on Patent ductus arteriosus
sugaplum on Borderline personality disorder
jlbae on An excess of very long chain fatty acids
carolebaskin on Gallstone ileus
medicalmike on Daily exercise program
carolebaskin on Pulmonary contusion
medicalmike on Wean from the ventilator
sugaplum on Right optic nerve
medicalmike on Obstruction of cerebrospinal fluid flow
derpymd on Observation in the emergency department

search for anything NEW!