NEOUCOM M2-NEUROLOGY MODULE-NEUROPATHOLOGY
NEUROPATHOLOGY LECTURE TOPICS
AND READING ASSIGNMENTS
March 22, 2010, 11:00 AM: Perinatal
disorders-Dr Agamanolis-podcast (all
web pages in this chapter)
March 22, 2010, 12:00 noon: Demyelinating
diseases-Dr Agamanolis-podcast (all
web pages in this chapter except
Central Pontine Myelinolysis)
March 23, 2010, 10:00 AM: A
primer in metabolic disorders-Dr
Dimitri Agamanolis-lecture (all
web pages from this chapter)
March 26, 2010:00 AM: Cerebral
ischemia and stroke -Dr
Agamanolis-lecture (all web
pages in this chapter)
March 29, 2010, 8:00 AM: Brain
tumors-Dr Harry Kellermier-lecture
(all web pages in this chapter)
March 29, 2010, 11:00 AM: Peripheral
Neuropathy-Dr Agamanolis-lecture
(all web pages in this chapter)
March 29, 2010, 12:00 noon: Myopathology-Dr
Agamanolis-lecture (all
web pages in this chapter)
March 31, 2010, 12:00 noon: CNS
Infections-Dr Agamanolis-podcast (all web pages in this chapter)
April 2, 2010, 8:00 AM: Traumatic
Brain Injury & CJD-Dr
Kellermier-lecture (all
web pages in the TBI chapter and Prion
Diseases in CNS Infections)
April 5, 2010, 10:00 AM: Degenerative
diseases-Dr Kellermier-lecture
(all web pages in this chapter)
LABORATORIES
Lab
1 (Cerebral ischemia
and stroke, CNC infections, Demyelinative
diseases)
Lab
2 (Traumatic brain injury,
Brain tumors)
Lab
3 (Perinatal disorders,
Degenerative diseases, Neuromuscular
pathology)
GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS FOR NEUROPATHOLOGY
The Neuropathology component of the Neurology/Geriatrics/Eye Module of the step 3 Curriculum consists of 8 lectures, most of which precede clinical lectures on the same topics.
It would help if, before starting Neuropathology, you refresh your memory on the following items:
1. Basic gross anatomy: the meninges; the lobes of the brain, gross cortical landmarks (the motor and visual cortex, hippocampus, the Sylvian fissure); the visual pathway; the ventricles of the brain and their openings; the basal ganglia and thalamus; the brainstem (midbrain, pons, medulla, aqueduct, cerebral peduncles, substantia nigra, main brainstem nuclei, cranial nerves); the cerebellum; the main cerebral arteries and their territories.
2. Basic histology and reactions, e.g., axons, myelin, gliosis, microglial nodule, macrophages, what "degeneration" means. You will find these in Chapter 1"Neurocytology and basic reactions”. Some of these concepts are also explained at the beginning of each chapter.
Study each topic once well before the lecture. The lectures will not be a repetition of the web site material and will not dwell on details. It will be assumed that you have read the material and you are familiar with it in a general way. The lectures will then focus on basic principles of pathology and how they relate to clinical practice. They will contain mock tests and will be interactive as much as possible.
The labs are exercises that will further solidify your knowledge of basic principles and help you prepare for the exam. See Laboratories for further instructions.
If you follow the above plan, you will not need much further study. You will save yourselves time, and breeze through the course and the exam without anxiety. More important, you will have learned basic clinical neuropathology.
