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Physician Assistant Exam Review
Brian Wallace PA-C
184 episodes
1 week ago
We review core medical knowledge on continuous basis in order to prepare you for the PANCE or PANRE.
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Medicine
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All content for Physician Assistant Exam Review is the property of Brian Wallace PA-C and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
We review core medical knowledge on continuous basis in order to prepare you for the PANCE or PANRE.
Show more...
Science
Medicine
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts112/v4/58/45/2e/58452ea9-3b0f-6b1c-4a6e-e4cd769509e6/mza_609564741356534096.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
132 Neuro: Neoplasms & how to be a better student
Physician Assistant Exam Review
22 minutes 43 seconds
3 months ago
132 Neuro: Neoplasms & how to be a better student
Neurologic Neoplasms
Benign Neurologic Neoplasms
Meningioma

  • Most common benign intracranial tumor; originates from meninges (arachnoid cells)

  • Slow-growing, frequently calcified


Clinical Presentation



  • Often asymptomatic or gradual-onset headaches, seizures, focal deficits


Labs, Studies, and Physical Exam Findings



  • MRI: extra-axial lesion with dural attachment (“dural tail sign”)

  • CT: often calcified


Treatment



  • Surgical resection if symptomatic; observation if incidental



Schwannoma (Acoustic Neuroma)

  • Originates from Schwann cells, commonly affects CN VIII at cerebellopontine angle


Clinical Presentation



  • Progressive unilateral hearing loss, tinnitus, balance issues

  • Possible facial nerve involvement (CN VII)


Labs, Studies, and Physical Exam Findings



  • MRI: enhancing lesion at cerebellopontine angle


Treatment



  • Surgical resection, stereotactic radiosurgery, or observation if small



Pituitary Adenoma

  • Benign anterior pituitary tumor; may be hormone-secreting or nonfunctional


Clinical Presentation



  • Endocrine abnormalities (prolactinoma, acromegaly, Cushing’s disease)

  • Bitemporal hemianopsia from optic chiasm compression


Labs, Studies, and Physical Exam Findings



  • MRI: sellar mass compressing optic chiasm

  • Hormone level assessment (prolactin, GH, ACTH)


Treatment



  • Prolactinoma: Dopamine agonists (Cabergoline)

  • Surgical resection if visual or hormonal disturbances



Malignant Neurologic Neoplasms
Glioblastoma Multiforme (GBM)

  • Most common and aggressive primary CNS malignancy; Grade IV astrocytoma


Clinical Presentation



  • Rapid onset and progression of headaches, seizures, focal deficits, cognitive changes

  • Increased ICP: nausea/vomiting, papilledema


Labs, Studies, and Physical Exam Findings



  • MRI: irregular, infiltrative lesion with central necrosis (“butterfly” glioma crossing corpus callosum) and extensive edema


Treatment



  • Surgical debulking, radiation, chemotherapy (Temozolomide)

  • Prognosis poor (median survival 12-15 months)



Medulloblastoma

  • Malignant pediatric brain tumor located in cerebellum; commonly in posterior fossa


Clinical Presentation



  • Symptoms due to obstructive hydrocephalus: headache, vomiting, ataxia, gait instability

  • Increased ICP: papilledema, altered mental status


Labs, Studies, and Physical Exam Findings



  • MRI: enhancing mass in posterior fossa; obstructive hydrocephalus


Treatment



  • Surgical resection, radiation, chemotherapy

  • Prognosis varies with subtype and resection completeness



CNS Lymphoma (Primary CNS Lymphoma)

  • Aggressive malignancy primarily affecting immunocompromised patients (HIV/AIDS, post-transplant)


Clinical Presentation



  • Rapid cognitive decline, focal neurological deficits, seizures

  • May present with constitutional “B symptoms” (fever, weight loss, night sweats)

Physician Assistant Exam Review
We review core medical knowledge on continuous basis in order to prepare you for the PANCE or PANRE.