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1.
Propafenone hydrochloride, a class IC antiarrhythmic drug, is used in the treatment of ventricular and supraventricular arrhythmias. Herein we describe a patient with episodic jabbing and crushing pain in his hands and feet, aching in his forearms, and hyperesthesias of his extremities. He had been taking propafenone for 1 year because of ventricular arrhythmias. Results of a nerve conduction velocity test were abnormal. Electron microscopic findings on a sural nerve biopsy specimen represented distal small fiber neuropathy. Findings on a thermoregulatory sweat test and on autonomic tests were abnormal, compatible with a distal small fiber neuropathy. To our knowledge, peripheral neuropathy has not previously been reported to occur with use of propafenone. In this patient, propafenone seemed to be responsible for the development of peripheral neuropathy, which resolved after use of the drug had been discontinued.  相似文献   

2.
There is agreement on the clinical diagnostic criteria for acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (AIDP/GBS) however, there is lack of consensus for detection of demyelination. In order to critically evaluate the prevailing criteria, sixty-six patients who fulfilled NINCDS criteria and had typical features of GBS were studied for electrophysiological abnormalities of peripheral nerves by using standard methods (median, common peroneal, sural and ulnar) between 1 to 12 weeks after the onset of symptoms. The commonest abnormality on motor nerve conduction study was prolonged distal latency (75%-83%) followed by reduction in CMAP amplitude (63%-82%), decreased velocity (48%-62%), conduction block (17%-39%) and f-wave abnormalities (37.8%-59%). Sensory conduction abnormalities were detected in over 20% of median, 25% of ulnar and 33% of sural nerves. All the patients had abnormality of at least two motor conduction parameters in one nerve when values beyond 2 SD of the mean were considered abnormal and over 70% of patients had three abnormalities in two nerves or two abnormalities in three nerves. Comparison with the prevailing criteria for demyelination revealed that the number of patients fulfilling them varied widely: Albers et al. (1985): 74.2%, Albers et al. (1989): 40.9% and Cornblath: 30.3%. We believe that the current criteria for detection of demyelination in acute neuropathy are too strict, underestimate the underlying pathology in GBS and need reassessment.  相似文献   

3.
The relative sensitivities of sensory, mixed nerve, and motor conduction studies in assessing ulnar neuropathy at the elbow have not yet been established. Using surface electrodes, we performed conduction studies across the elbow segment in 43 patients with symptoms referable to the ulnar nerve and 40 control subjects. Segmental slowing of motor conduction localized the lesion to the elbow in 14 of 21 patients (67%) with clear evidence of ulnar neuropathy on physical examination but only in 2 of 22 (9%) with subtle or no physical examination abnormalities. The diagnostic yield was increased by the finding of segmental slowing of sensory or mixed nerve conduction across the elbow to 86% and 68%, respectively, for each of the groups. We conclude that surface-recorded sensory and mixed nerve conduction studies appear to be more sensitive than motor studies in the electrodiagnosis of ulnar neuropathy at the elbow and are especially valuable in patients with subtle clinical involvement.  相似文献   

4.
Two patients exhibited chronic, slightly asymmetric weakness and wasting with fasciculations of the upper limb and hand muscles. Motor nerve conduction studies showed features of multifocal conduction block in nerve segments other than those usually involved in entrapment syndromes. The F wave was markedly delayed in the median and ulnar nerves. Transcranial cortical and cervical root magnetic stimulation showed bilaterally delayed thenar responses with normal central conduction time. Needle electromyography demonstrated a chronic denervation pattern with large polyphasic motor units in several muscles of the upper limbs. Sensory symptoms were mild and limited to paresthesias in the fingertips. Sensory nerve conduction velocity and sensory nerve action potential amplitudes were normal in elbow-to-wrist and wrist-to-finger segments of the median and ulnar nerves, but there was a delayed cortical response and unrecognizable Erb's point and cervical responses in the somatosensory evoked potentials to median nerve electrical stimulation. Electrophysiologic examination was normal in most nerves of the lower limbs. These two patients, meeting clinical and electrophysiologic criteria of multifocal neuropathy with conduction block, demonstrate that sensory fibers may also be involved in this syndrome.  相似文献   

5.
Idiopathic brachial plexus neuropathy (BPN) is an immune-mediated disorder characterized by an acute onset of painful weakness in one or both upper extremities. The course is usually monophasic with gradual improvement over months; however, occasionally BPN can recur. Electrophysiologic studies suggest the pathogenesis is primarily axonal in the majority of cases. We describe an unusual case of BPN in which the patient had a chronic and relapsing course of painless weakness associated with conduction blocks and other electrophysiologic features of demyelination across the brachial plexus. The patient improved following treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin. The neuropathy falls within the spectrum of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy and multifocal motor neuropathy.  相似文献   

6.
A 38-year-old woman with acute monoblastic leukemia developed severe continuous pain in the left arm while she was in hematologic remission following both systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy. A nerve conduction study (NCS) showed marked decrease of amplitude in the left ulnar nerve, consistent with infiltration of leukemic cells. The pain in the arm was reduced by irradiation to the left brachial plexus, but right facial nerve palsy occurred. No improvement was achieved by systemic and intrathecal chemotherapy plus irradiation to the whole brain and right parotid. After sometime, she complained of pains in the legs and right foot drop. NCS showed amplitude decrease in bilateral peroneal nerve. Throughout the course, bone marrow remained in complete remission, and no signs of meningeal leukemia were obtained. A treatment with high dose Ara-C appeared to be effective for the pain in the legs. The foot drop, however, persisted and peripheral neuropathy progressed even after high dose Ara-C therapy. Peripheral nerve involvement in acute leukemia appears to be rare, and even more so in case of hematologic remission. The blood-nerve barrier may allow some malignant cells to escape from cytotoxic agents. Therefore, irradiation or high dose Ara-C therapy would seem to be rational approaches to the problem.  相似文献   

7.
In this study 37 CTS hands underwent pre- and post-operative (15 days 2 and 6 months) evaluation of median nerve distal motor latency (DML) and sensory nerve conduction velocities (SNCV: I digit and III digit-wrist). Pre-operatively, CTS hands were classified as mild (decreased SNCV, normal DML), moderate (decreased SNCV, increased DML) or severe (absent sensory nerve action potentials, increased DML). Post-operatively, all hands presented clinical and neurophysiological improvement. The three groups of patient showed different clinical and neurophysiological responses to nerve decompression: we observed a rapid restitutio ad integrum in mild group, an improvement with normalisation in about 50% of the hands in moderate group, and a high percentage of restore of the sensory responses with no normalisation in severe group. A marked improvement of sensory symptoms was observed in all cases, but some degree of motor and/or sensory deficit was still present six months after surgery in more advanced cases. Preoperative electrophysiological assessment of median nerve function in CTS hands have an important role in predicting the outcome of surgical decompression.  相似文献   

8.
An isolated compression neuropathy of the palmar cutaneous branch of the median nerve is described in a woman who presented with a small tender mass over the anterior aspect of her distal forearm and complete numbness over the thenar eminence. Surgical exploration revealed thickening of the palmar cutaneous nerve as it passed upwards through the antebrachial fascia on the ulnar aspect of the flexor carpi radialis tendon. Neurolysis of two separate fascicles of the palmar cutaneous branch of the median nerve and excision of a window of antebrachial fascia resulted in complete return of sensation over the thenar eminence.  相似文献   

9.
Much confusion and disagreement exists regarding the classification and characteristics of inherited disorders manifesting neurogenic muscular atrophy. Many authors consider Charcot-Marie-Tooth syndrome (CMTS) and Roussy Levy syndrome (RLS) forme fruste or variants of Friedreich's ataxia (FA). Familial kyphoscoliosis has often been described in FA and RLS but not with CMTS. The purpose of this paper is to present detailed clinical and laboratory findings in a family with three cases of Scheuermann's kyphoscoliosis and CMTS in three generations. In all cases Scheuermann's kyphoscoliosis was associated with pes cavus, markedly diminished vibratory and position sensation in the lower extremities, absent deep tendon reflexes and muscular atrophy, predominantly of the distal muscles. Fine rhythmic tremor of outstretched hands and positive Romberg sign were present in one case only. Serum creating phosphokinase was elevated in two cases. Motor nerve conduction studies revealed impaired function in the median, ulnar, tibial and peroneal nerves. Sensory nerve conduction wal also impaired in median and ulnar nerves. There was evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy in one case only. The nosology and relationship between CMTS, RLS and FA are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Fifteen patients with unilateral functioning arteriovenous fistula were assessed clinically and electromyographically to identify local neurologic changes. Ten of the patients were symptomatic (motor and/or sensory) and 5 were asymptomatic. Clinically, 11 patients had signs of a mild polyneuropathy, 2 patients of ulnar neuropathy, and 1 patient had signs of median neuropathy. A decrease of the above-elbow ulnar conduction velocity was noted in the study group on the side of the functional fistula, and in the symptomatic patients only on the side of the nonfunctional/nonexisting fistula. We suggest that ulnar nerve vulnerability should be taken into consideration during construction of the fistula, as well as during dialysis.  相似文献   

11.
The authors report clinical and electrophysiological findings in 59 patients with tarsal tunnel syndrome (TTS) and follow-up in 23 of them. The entrapment was prevalent in females; was bilateral in 6 patients and involved medial plantar in 7 and lateral plantar nerves in two cases. Eleven presented with other nerve entrapment syndromes or focal mononeuropathies, due to hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy or systemic diseases. The other 48 subjects had TTS without any other related entrapment syndromes: 23 were idiopathic cases, 13 had a history of local trauma, 3 had systemic diseases and the others had external or intrinsic compressions. The most frequent symptoms were paraesthesia or dysaesthesia (86% of feet) and pain (55%). Hypoaesthesia of the sole and weakness of toe flexion were evident in 74% and 22% of feet, respectively. Absence of sensory action potential or slowing of sensory conduction velocity (SCV) of the plantar nerves were present in 77% of feet; significant differences of SCV between affected and unaffected plantar nerves and/or between distal sural and plantar nerves were evident in 14%. Abnormalities of plantar SCV were therefore absent in only 9% of feet. Distal motor latency was delayed in 55% and electromyography showed neurogenic changes in 45% of sole muscles. Five cases (6 feet) underwent surgery with excellent or good results in 5, 4 of them also showing improvement in distal conduction of the plantar nerves. Nine were treated with local steroid injections, with good results shown in 6 patients. Nine other patients who did not receive any therapy showed a disappearance of symptoms or good outcome in 6 cases. The subjects with poor therapeutic results had S1 radiculopathy or systemic diseases. The authors underline that patients with connective tissue diseases should not be treated by surgical decompression because they may have subclinical neuropathy. Some subjects with idiopathic or trauma-induced TTS recover spontaneously. Surgical release should be limited to cases with space-occupying lesions and when conservative treatments fail.  相似文献   

12.
Fifty-three hands with carpal tunnel syndrome had pre- and postoperative evaluations of median nerve distal motor latency (from wrist to thenar muscles) and orthodromic sensory nerve conduction velocity (from thumb and middle finger to wrist). At 6 months we observed a neurophysiological return to normal in all cases with normal preoperative distal motor latency and in about 50% of the hands with preoperative distal motor latency between 4 and 6 ms. Prolongation of the distal motor latency over 6 ms was not followed by return to neurophysiological normality, although some degree of sensory function was restored in the majority of cases.  相似文献   

13.
A study was carried out on 135 patients with chronic idiopathic neuropathy (63), neuropathy associated with monoclonal gammopathy (51, including eight with anti-MAG antibody activity) and the Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) (21). Serum IgM, IgG and IgA anti-sulphatide antibody titres were compared with titres in 304 patients with other neurological or immunological diseases and in 50 normal subjects. Titres were presented a) as the highest serum dilution at which reactivity could be detected, and b) in the linear region of the optical density curve. A substantial number of patients with neurological or immunological diseases had higher titres than normal subjects. Compared with normal and disease controls, five patients with neuropathy associated with IgMk monoclonal gammopathy had raised titres of IgM anti-sulphatide antibodies and one patient with GBS had raised IgM, IgG and IgA anti-sulphatide antibodies in the acute phase of the disease. Two patients had a predominantly axonal sensory neuropathy with presenting symptoms of painful paresthesiae and minimal neurological deficit. Three patients had a predominantly demyelinating sensorimotor neuropathy associated with anti-MAG antibody activity. The patient with GBS had extensive sensory loss and antibody titres returned to normal within three weeks. Raised titres of anti-sulphatide antibodies occurred in several types of neuropathy, but all had some degree of sensory impairment and associated immunological abnormality.  相似文献   

14.
In 49 patients (98 hands), referred to an electrodiagnostic laboratory, assessments were made by conventional nerve conduction studies on the upper extremity and by two more portable modalities, namely electroneurometry (skin surface electrical stimulation of the motor nerve) and single-frequency (120 Hz) vibrometry. Tests were performed on median and ulnar nerves. Correlations with motor nerve conduction studies for each screening test on the median nerve were r = .81 for the electroneurometer and r = .48 for the vibrometer. When carpal tunnel syndrome was diagnosed either by clinical criteria only or by nerve conduction abnormality, the association with electroneurometry was characterized by high sensitivity and low specificity, while the opposite relationship prevailed with vibrometry. These associations were highly dependent on the methods used to select normal values from a reference population. While the manufacturer's recommended normal values offered good predictability, with thresholds that corresponded to nerve conduction studies, normal values generated in a more standard way produced much weaker and less useful associations. The selection of an appropriate electrical screening test for peripheral nerve injury, such as entrapment neuropathy, depends on the prevalence and seriousness of the target disease and the relative consequences of over- and underdiagnosis.  相似文献   

15.
M Hahn  A Hirschfeld  H Sander 《Canadian Metallurgical Quarterly》1998,49(5):514-8; discussion 518-9
BACKGROUND: Hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy types I and III usually lead to enlargement of peripheral nerves. Rarely, spinal nerve roots may also be involved, leading to radiculopathy and/or myelopathy. METHODS: This 44-year-old man with back and lower extremity radicular pain and distal lower extremity weakness and numbness was found to have a nonenhancing intradural mass that caused a nearly complete myelographic block from L1-L4. He underwent a decompressive laminectomy with intradural exploration. RESULTS: Hypertrophic but otherwise normal-looking nerve roots were observed. Subsequent electrodiagnostic testing and sural nerve biopsy confirmed that this patient had a previously unsuspected hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN). His pain resolved, but at latest follow-up his weakness and numbness persisted. CONCLUSIONS: Nonenhancing spinal intradural mass lesions may represent enlarged nerve roots, which have a number of potential etiologies. Electrodiagnostic studies and peripheral nerve biopsy are instrumental in establishing the diagnosis of HMSN.  相似文献   

16.
To test the hypothesis that nociception from veins plays a role in the formation of perivenous edema, we looked at edema along hand veins of humans during painful noxious stimulation in the presence and absence of nerve conduction block. Pain from vascularly isolated hand vein segments was evoked by perfusion with hyperosmolar saline and rated with the help of an electronically controlled visual analogue scale. Perivenous edema measured as changes in skin altitude was continuously recorded by means of infrared reflection. To alternately block the innervation of skin and vein segment we used a perivenous block (vein but not skin numbed), a distal ulnar nerve block (skin but not vein numbed), and a proximal ulnar nerve block (both vein and skin numbed). Without nerve block, hyperosmolar saline always evoked both pain and a continuous increase in perivenous edema to a maximum of 2.0-3.2 mm after 30 min. On painless control perfusions with isoosmolar saline, edema increased slightly (0.2-0.8 mm) to a plateau which was maintained until the end of perfusion. When the vein was denervated by perivenous or proximal ulnar nerve block, hyperosmolar saline evoked a slight increase in edema which resembled that of control perfusions in both extent and time course. On distal ulnar nerve block, which numbed the skin but not the vein, both pain and substantial edema were evoked. These observations show that nociception from veins is a prerequisite for perivenous edema to occur.  相似文献   

17.
Clinical, biological and electrophysiological features from a cohort of 39 multifocal motor neuropathies with conduction blocks (NMM with CB) have been studied. There were 29 males and 10 females with an average of 47.3. At the first evaluation, the mean duration of the symptoms was of 8 years with extremes between 1 and 28. Pain and paresthesias were present in respectively 10 and 18 p. 100 of the patients. Fasciculations and cramps were observed in more than 2/3 of the cases. Three patients had tremor at rest. Upper limb muscular weakness was the predominant initial symptom (84.6 p. 100). The weakness always affected distal and unilateral muscles. Radial and cubital nerve distribution are mainly affected and in half of the cases an unilateral motor deficit in the lower limb was associated. Muscle atrophy was frequent (74 p. 100) and rapidly developed in the first 2 years. Reflexes were decreased or absent in 64 p. 100. In 78 p. 100 of cases, biological study showed normal serum immunoelectrophoresis and CSF. IgM anti-GM1 antibodies were found in 24/36 patients. Very high titres were found in 5 cases. All patients had CB in upper limbs. The preferential localizations of the CB were equally at the median and ulnar nerves. Only 7 patients had CB localized to the lower limbs. In many cases, marked reduction of the motor amplitude prevented the detection of CB, marked reduction of the motor amplitude prevented the detection of CB. Moderate fibrillation potentials were found in 28 p. 100 of patients. Giant muscular unit potentials were frequent (21/39). F-waves in nerve with CB were always abnormal with marked increased latencies. Late responses sometimes seemed to be repeater F-waves. Axon reflexes were detected in 5 cases. The late responses abnormalities could precede the block. Clinical, biological and electrophysiological described arguments could may distinguish NMM with CB from motor neuron disease and relate them to the group of chronic demyelinating neuropathies.  相似文献   

18.
Hypothyroidism exerts a significant effect on several body systems, including the functioning of muscle and nerve. Described here is the case of a severely hypothyroid patient with weakness and numbness of the legs who showed marked clinical improvement with thyroid hormone treatment. Concurrently obtained phosphorus 31-nuclear magnetic resonance (NRM) spectra and nerve conduction studies showed changes in muscle phosphorus metabolism with increases in conduction velocities. Phosphorus 31-NMR spectroscopy is useful for evaluating metabolism in muscle in hypothyroid patients.  相似文献   

19.
A case of Waldenstr?m's macroglobulinemia (WM) (IgM-kappa type) associated with acute-onset demyelinating peripheral neuropathy is reported. A 49-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of general fatigue and recurrent syncope attacks. She was treated with vincristine, cyclophosphamide, epirubicin and prednisolone. By 10th hospital day, her clinical condition improved and serum viscosity was reduced. However, on the 21st hospital day, she suffered from rapidly progressive writing and gait disturbance. Neurological examination showed muscular atrophy and weakness in the distal part of four extremities. Deep tendon reflexes were diminished. There was no sensory deficit. Cerebrospinal fluid was normal. Anti-myelin associated glycoprotein activity of her serum was negative. Both motor and sensory nerve conduction velocities were markedly decreased. Biopsy of sural nerve revealed marked demyelination and onion bulb formation. There was IgM deposition on myelin sheath. Minimal axonal changes excluded the possibility of vincristine neuropathy. Plasmapheresis improved her symptoms, but nerve conduction velocities remained unchanged. Polyneuropathy associated with WM is usually gradual onset and sensory dominant. In this case, associated neuropathy was acute onset, progressive and motor dominant. This type of neuropathy in patients with WM is very rare.  相似文献   

20.
We performed detailed electrophysiologic studies on 16 patients with clinically defined multifocal motor neuropathy and found a wide spectrum of demyelinating features. Only five patients (31%) had conduction block in one or more nerves. However, in 15 patients (94%) at least one nerve showed other features of demyelination. We also noted a significant degree of superimposed axonal degeneration in 15 patients. Eight patients (50%) had individual nerves with pure axonal injury, despite the presence of demyelinating features in other nerves. Antiganglioside antibodies were elevated in four of five patients with conduction block and five of 11 patients without conduction block. We conclude that multifocal motor neuropathy is characterized electrophysiologically by a wide spectrum of axonal and demyelinating features. Diagnostic criteria requiring conduction block may lead to underdiagnosis of this potentially treatable neuropathy.  相似文献   

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