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Encyclopedia > Babinski sign

In medicine (neurology), the Babinski reflex or Babinski sign is a reflex that can identify disease of the spinal cord and brain. It is more properly called the plantar reflex, as Babinski's sign in reality only refers to the pathological form.

Contents

Methods

The lateral side of the sole of the foot is rubbed with a sharp or hard implement (usually the tip of a tendon hammer), running from the heel along a curve to the metatarsal pads. It is an unpleasant sensation for most. There are roughly three responses possible:

  • Flexor: the toes curve inwards and the foot pronates; this is the response seen in healthy adults.
  • Indifferent: there is no response (sometimes a feature of peripheral neuropathy).
  • Extensor: the pollux (large toe) extends upwards, and the other toes to a lesser extent; this response is Babinski's sign.

In decerebrate patients, a more complex reflex is observed, which includes the lifting of the whole leg. This is a primitive reflex, indicating that the brain has been damaged severely.


Interpretation

The extensor response can indicate damage of the spinal cord in the thoracal or lumbar region, or brain disease. Occasionally, a pathological plantar reflex is the first (and only) indication of a serious disease process, and a clearly abnormal plantar reflex often prompts detailed neurological investigations, including CT scanning of the brain or MRI of the spine, as well as lumbar puncture for the study of cerebrospinal fluid.


Young babies (less than a few months of age) will also show an extensor response. A baby's smaller toes will fan out, and their big toe will dorsiflex slowly. This happens because the corticospinal pathways (that run from the brain down the spinal cord) are not fully myelinated at this age, so the reflex is not inhibited by the cerebral cortex.


Eponym

The pathological reflex is named after Joseph Jules François Félix Babinski (1857_1932), a French Polish descent.


See also

External links

  • Biography (http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/370.html) of Joseph Babinski



  Results from FactBites:
 
Joseph BabiÅ„ski - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (491 words)
Babinski was the son of a Polish engineer and his wife who in 1848 fled Warsaw for Paris because of a Russian reign of terror instigated to stall Polish attempts at achieving independence.
Babinski also took an interest in the pathogenesis of hysteria and was the first to present acceptable differential diagnostical criteria for separating hysteria from organic diseases, and coined the concept of pithiatisme.
Babinski's sign: A pathological reflex where the great toe extends in presence of an injury to the pyramidal tract.
Plantar reflex - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (424 words)
As the lesion responsible for the sign expands so does the area from which the upgoing toe sign (Babinski response) may be elicited.
Babinski response is normal while asleep and after long period of walking (such as soldiers' marching).
The Hoffmann sign, also known as the finger flexor reflex, is occasionally said to be the upper limb equivalent of the Babinski's sign because both indicate upper motor neuron dysfunction.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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