Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

which of the following best describes the typical clinical findings of …

Question

which of the following best describes the typical clinical findings of cervical spine myelopathy? 45 - year - old, 1+ on all lower extremity reflexes, numbness in feet, no motor deficit 50 - year - old, positive babinski sign, normal gait, intact sensation 64 - year - old, positive hoffmanns sign, hyperreflexia, difficulty with fine motor skills 30 - year - old, hyporeflexia, intact fine motor skills, neck stiffness

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

Cervical spine myelopathy typically affects older adults (usually 50+ years) due to spinal cord compression from degenerative changes. Key findings include upper motor neuron signs: hyperreflexia, positive Hoffmann's sign (a reflex indicating upper motor neuron dysfunction), and fine motor skill impairment (from cervical cord affecting upper extremity control).

  • The first option has no motor deficit and only 1+ reflexes (not hyperreflexia), inconsistent with myelopathy.
  • The second option has normal gait and intact sensation, which does not match the typical multi-system involvement of myelopathy.
  • The fourth option affects a young patient, has hyporeflexia (lower motor neuron sign) and no upper motor neuron deficits, which is not characteristic of cervical myelopathy.

Answer:

64-year-old, positive Hoffmann's sign, hyperreflexia, difficulty with fine motor skills