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1.
In 167 consecutive patients with various types of neuropathy, the amplitude of the sensory potential and the maximum conduction velocity along the sural nerve were compared with conduction in other sensory nerves, and were related to structural changes revealed by nerve biopsy. Electrophysiological findings in the sural nerve were similar to those in the superficial peroneal and the median nerve, though the distal segment of the median nerve was normal in 20 per cent of the patients when it was abnormal in the sural nerve. Quantitation of histological findings was a more sensitive method than the electrophysiological study in that two-thirds of 33 patients with normal electrophysiology in the sural nerve showed mild loss of fibres or signs of remyelination in teased fibres. The amplitude of the sensory potential was grossly related to the number of large myelinated fibres (more than 7 micrometer in diameter). Considering the 95 nerves from which teased fibres were obtained, maximum conduction velocity was abnormal in half. In 18 of these nerves, slowing in conduction was due to axonal degeneration: the velocity was as to be expected from the diameter of the largest fibres in the biopsy ("proportionate slowing"). In 9 nerves slowing was severe and more marked than to be expected from loss of the largest fibres ("disproportionate slowing"); these nerves showed paranodal or segmental demyelination in more than 30 per cent of the fibres. In 16 nerves from patients with neuropathy of different aetiology neither loss of fibres nor demyelination could explain the moderate slowing. The cause of slowing in these nerves is unknown; other conditions are referred to in which slowing in conduction cannot be attributed to morphological changes. Finally, electrophysiological and histological findings are reported in some patients with neuropathy associated with malignant neoplasm, with rheumatoid arthritis, with polyarteritis nodosa, with acute intermittent porphyria and with cirrhosis of the liver.  相似文献   

2.
Nerve biopsy and conduction studies in diabetic neuropathy.   总被引:25,自引:5,他引:20       下载免费PDF全文
Morphological findings in sural nerves were related to nerve conduction in 12 patients with diabetic neuropathy, five with mainly sensory involvement, four with severe, symmetrical sensory-motor polyneuropathy, and three with multiple mononeuropathy. All had loss of large and small myelinated and of unmyelinated fibres, even early in the disease; segmental remyelination was the most prominent myelin alteration in teased fibres, segmental demyelination was found in only a few fibres. Axonal degeneration and Schwann cell damage seem to proceed independently of each other. The relation between recorded conduction velocity and that expected from the diameter of the largest fibres indicated that slowing of 20 to 30% was due to causes other than fibre loss; a grossly diminished conduction velocity was caused mainly by fibre loss. Electrophysiological findings in the sural nerve were largely representative of findings in other nerves, though abnormalities were less marked in the median nerve. In half the endoneurial vessels from diabetic neuropathy the perivascular space was thickened or contained more layers of basal laminae than normal. The same abnormalities were found in one-quarter of the endoneurial vessels from other acquired neuropathies.  相似文献   

3.
Surface, needle and micro-electrode recordings were obtained from sensory nerves of patients with various types of peripheral neuropathy. Changes in amplitude and conduction velocity of nerve action potentials were measured after a single conditioning stimulus and after tetanic stimulation for 2 min. In patients with hereditary forms of axonal degeneration (AD), recovery processes of nerve fibres of all conduction velocities were normal; in acquired forms of AD fibres with conduction velocity less than 30 m/sec had greater and more prolonged post-tetanic depression than control nerves of similar conduction velocity. Where neuropathy was associated with segmental demyelination (SD), fibres of all conduction velocities had prolonged recovery processes after both single and tetanic stimulation. The changes were especially marked at higher skin temperature, and were greater than the changes seen in nerves with acquired forms of AD. Finally, 2 sural nerves were studied during the process of Wallerian degeneration after a biopsy had been obtained proximally, and recovery processes did not change during the period of degeneration. Perceptual abnormalities were similar in AD and SD. It is suggested that changes in recovery processes of nerve fibres with segmental demyelination or regeneration after injury contribute to the perceptual abnormalities which occur in clinically encountered peripheral neuropathies.  相似文献   

4.
Summary A teased fibre and electron-microscopical study was carried out on the sciatic nerves of mice affected with the peripheral neuropathy in dystonia musculorum. Widespread segmental demyelination was present in all the nerves. Focal axon swellings were also seen, but were relatively scarce and similar in appearance to post-traumatic reactive swellings. The variability of dystonic internodal lengths was indicative of segmental demyelination rather than axonal degeneration. The largely motor fibres of the phrenic nerve were seen to undergo a similar degenerative process, but with a later onset and more gradual progression. Segmental demyelination was found to be present before axon swellings and other degenerative changes became visible in developing phrenic nerve. Demyelination is thus an important pathological process in dystonia musculorum, and the present observations are consistent with a primary segmental demyelinating disorder in dystonic peripheral nerve.  相似文献   

5.
Three ulnar nerves at the elbow were obtained at necropsy on two patients with unrelated terminal illnesses and were examined by light and electron microscopy. In one case clinical evidence of ulnar neuropathy had been present. A neuromatous swelling was found on one nerve immediately proximal to the tendinous arch of the flexor carpi ulnaris muscle. At this level abnormalities in single teased fibres were found in all three nerves, including segmental demyelination and remyelination, and the presence of paranodal bulbous swellings and demyelination. Transverse sections showed a gradation of changes proximally and distally, the greatest abnormalities being present at the level of the tendinous arch. Perineurial thickening and endo-neurial oedema were seen, the latter producing a reduction in fibre density which returned to normal on either side of the lesion. Percentage frequency histograms showed a marked reduction in the proportion of large diameter fibres at the level of the lesion. Numerous clusters of regenerated and remyelinated fibres (regeneration clusters) were present; these were significantly increased in number in those areas in which abnormalities were present in single teased fibres. The significance of the changes has been discussed. It is suggested that the presence of many regeneration clusters in otherwise apparently normal transverse sections of nerves taken from sites where entrapment may occur indicates that underlying abnormalities will be seen in single teased nerve fibres and early compression neuropathy is present.  相似文献   

6.
Among 980 sural nerve biopsies, the nerves of 10 patients showed a great number of focal sausage-shaped thickenings of the myelin sheaths and were investigated by light and electron microscopy, teasing and quantitative studies. Single teased nerve fibres revealed myelin thickening in more than 25 p. 100 of internodes. This condition defined the tomaculous neuropathy and differed from other degenerative or toxic neuropathies which displayed a small number of internodes with myelin thickenings, in less than 5 p. 100. Segmental demyelination and remyelination were found in 12 p. 100 to 65 p. 100 of myelinated fibres. Tomaculous swellings were observed in the internodes of these fibres. Except axonal constriction within the sausage-shaped thickenings, no fibers with axonal degeneration was observed. The density of myelinated and unmyelinated fibres was normal. The loss of large myelinated fibres was interpreted as resulting from the myelinic changes. Clinical and electrophysiological data were similar in the ten cases of tomaculous neuropathies and in hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies, i.e.: autosomal dominant inheritance, higher incidence in males, recurrent nerve trunck and/or brachial plexus involvement related to compression, slowing of nerve conduction velocities in clinically affected and unaffected nerves more pronounced in anatomical narrow sites and increased F wave latencies. One patient (case 10) showed a mixed sensory motor progressive neuropathy but signs of widespread neuropathy were noted in more advanced cases. A great number of tomaculous swellings of myelin sheaths is considered as a specific but non constant change of hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies.  相似文献   

7.
Leprosy is one of the most common treatable causes of neuropathy in the world. Peripheral nerves and skin are commonly affected. We reported the clinical features and electrophysiological findings in 46 patients with leprosy. The aim of our study was to evaluate the nature of damage in the nerve fibres, especially in the first phase of disease. Forty‐six patients (mean age: 44.8 ± 17.8) with diagnosed leprosy were studied by neurological examination and nerve conduction studies (NCS). Twenty‐eight patients were examined for a mean period of 34.8 months. The number of tests for patients varied from 1 to 13 controls. Amplitude of sensory and motor action potentials (SNAP and MAP), sensory‐motor conduction velocity of median, ulnar, tibialis, peroneal and sural nerves were evaluated. Abnormalities were found in 282 of 647 nerves investigated (37.56%), sensory nerve abnormalities being more frequent than motor (50.16% 29.45). Of 282 nerves with neurophysiological abnormalities, 123 were clinically asymptomatic (43.62%). A statistically significant correlation between duration of disease and number of electrophysiological abnormalities was demonstrated. In 19 nerves partial "conduction‐block"(reduction of cMAP > 50% in the proximal response) was individuated. The first electrophysiological alteration, suggesting segmental demyelination, was detected in 41 nerves of 21 patients (33.3 %). According to this view, our data support the hypothesis that leprosy induces a neuropathy of demyelinating nature in the first phase.  相似文献   

8.
OBJECTIVE: In polyneuropathy associated with monoclonal IgM gammopathy, nerve conduction studies may show disproportionate distal slowing consistent with segmental demyelination. This was suggested to represent a length-dependent demyelinating process, starting in distal and proceeding to proximal segments. Because the evidence for this is incomplete, we assessed whether length dependence occurs in IgM neuropathy. METHODS: In 22 patients with IgM neuropathy, 20 disease controls with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) and 36 normal controls, we investigated motor conduction, sensory conduction, and needle electromyography for nerves with short, intermediate-length, and long axons as well as conduction in short segments of the ulnar nerve from proximal to distal. To compare variables in nerves of different length, we normalized individual values with respect to the median in normal controls. RESULTS: In IgM neuropathy, distal slowing and features of axon loss increased with nerve length, and ulnar nerve conduction became gradually slower from proximal to distal when the elbow segment was excluded. In CIDP, no clear length dependence was found except for distal amplitude. INTERPRETATION: The disproportionate distal slowing in IgM neuropathy may be part of a length-dependent process, assuming that this process is randomly distributed due to a generalized exposure to IgM.  相似文献   

9.
Nerve conduction and biopsy findings from the sural nerve in 37 patients with alcohokic neuropathy were compared with findings in 6 patients who had neuropathy associated with postgastrectomy malnutrition. Half the patients with alcoholic neuropathy had both muscle weakness and sensory loss, half had only sensory impairment, but all had electromyographic signs of denervation. Only half the patients, with or without muscle weakness, had signs of malnutrition. In alcoholics, sural nerve conduction velocity was slowed to at most 60% of normal, correlating with loss of large fibers. These findings, together with a marked reduction in amplitude of the sensory potentials, are consistent with axonal loss. Myelinated fiber counts showed loss of small and large fibers in most nerves, retaining a bimodal distribution. Signs of regeneration were rare. Segmental demyelination was found in only 0.3% of teased fibers. Electron microscopy confirmed axonal degeneration of myelinated and unmyelinated fibers. Neuropathy after gastrectomy malnutrition was clinically similar to alcoholic neuropathy. Conduction velocities were slower than expected from the diameter of the largest myelinated fibers, however, and teased fibers showed segmental demyelination. The findings are against alcoholic neuropathy being due to malnutrition and suggest a toxic action on peripheral nerve.  相似文献   

10.
After 2-3 weeks exposure to hexachlorophane, maximum motor nerve conduction velocity in sciatic nerves of rats was reduced by 7.5% and evoked muscle action potential amplitude by 9%. Histological examination at this stage showed intramyelin oedema affecting some fibres and axonal degeneration of other fibres. After longer periods of exposure velocity and amplitude fell further. Velocity was reduced by 27% after 6-7 months treatment. In addition to intramyelin oedema and axonal degeneration, segmental demyelination was present in animals intoxicated for more than three months. There was no correlation between the degree of oedema and reduction of conduction velocity. It is concluded that intramyelin oedema has little or no effect on conduction velocity. Nodes of Ranvier are normal in the early stages of the lesion and this may contribute to the preservation of normal conduction. The electrophysiological findings can be attributed to secondary changes of axonal degeneration and segmental demyelination.  相似文献   

11.
The pathological basis of conduction block in human neuropathies.   总被引:4,自引:3,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
Conduction block was detected in patients with neuropathy by measuring a decrease in the size of the compound muscle action potential of more than 20% on proximal versus distal stimulation of the peroneal, median or ulnar nerve in the absence of excess temporal dispersion of the potential. The teased fibre analyses of nerve biopsies from four patients with "definite" and six patients with "probable" conduction block and from seven patients with neuropathy but without conduction block were compared. All patients with conduction block had significant demyelination (X% demyelinated and remyelinated fibres = 50%) while those without conduction block did not (X = 5.0%). Demyelination is the pathological basis of conduction block in human neuropathies.  相似文献   

12.
Fascicles of the sural nerve from each of 20 diabetic patients, mostly with maturity-onset diabetes, were studied by biochemical and pathological techniques, and results were compared to values found in nerve specimens from 15 healthy persons. The sorbitol and fructose content was much more variable in diabetic than in healthy nerves. More than one-third of the diabetic nerves had sorbitol and fructose values above the highest levels for controls. myo-Inositol and scyllo-inositol content was not reduced in diabetic nerves. The sorbitol, fructose, and inositol concentrations could not be related to clinical, neurophysiological, or pathological severity of neuropathy. A comparison of scored symptoms and signs and clinical neurophysiological studies against morphometric and teased fiber studies of sural nerve demonstrated that the former three provide sensitive and reliable measures of severity of neuropathy that can be used for controlled clinical trials of diabetic neuropathy. The presence and type of teased fiber abnormalities could be related to the duration of diabetes and to symptoms of neuropathy. In untreated diabetics without symptoms of neuropathy, a higher than normal frequency of teased fibers showing segmental demyelination and remyelination was found. Untreated diabetics with symptomatic neuropathy showed two kinds of abnormalities: fibers with segmental demyelination and remyelination and fibers undergoing axonal degeneration. In treated diabetics, who often had longstanding neuropathy, the most common abnormalities were fibers undergoing axonal degeneration.  相似文献   

13.
In 117 consecutive patients with carpal tunnel syndrome and 11 patients with a compression syndrome of the median nerve at elbow, motor and sensory conduction along the median and ulnar nerves and quantitative electromyography were compared with findings in 190 normal controls of the same age. In 25% of patients with carpal tunnel syndrome in whom motor conduction and EMG were normal, the lesion was located from abnormalities in sensory conduction. The fact that conduction along the same fibres was moderately slowed from digit to palm, severely slowed across the flexor retinaculum, and normal from wrist to elbow indicates that slowing was due to demyelination at the site of compression. Fifteen per cent of the patients with carpal tunnel syndrome had clinical and electrophysiological signs of ulnar involvement. In the other patients conduction along the ulnar nerve was as in 100 normal controls. Compression at the elbow was located by electromyographical findings rather than by abnormalities in conduction.  相似文献   

14.
Peripheral neuropathy in abetalipoproteinemia   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We studied the peripheral neuropathy of three sisters with abetalipoproteinemia. Clinically, a sensory neuropathy progressively increased in severity. There was a diminution in the amplitude of sensory action potentials and a slight-to-moderate slowing in maximum sensory conduction velocity, initially most marked in distal portions of the nerves. Motor conduction was normal, although EMG indicated subclinical signs of partial chronic denervation. The sural nerves showed a decreased number of large fibers (greater than 7 micron); in the patient with the neuropathy of shortest duration, small fibers and clusters of regenerating fibers indicated regeneration. In the two patients with advanced neuropathy, one-half the segments of teased fibers showed paranodal demyelination. Also, unmyelinated fibers showed evidence of regeneration.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: In X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTX), electrophysiological and histopathological studies have suggested either a demyelinating or an axonal polyneuropathy. We report a CMTX family with a striking heterogeneity of nerve conductions between and within nerves. METHODS: Two men and one woman have been studied by conduction velocities, sural nerve biopsy with morphometry (one man) and DNA analysis. RESULTS: In both men motor conduction velocities were slowed in the demyelinating range, conduction velocity differences among nerves in the same subject varied from 13 to 24 m/s, and distal median compound muscle action potential (CMAP) amplitudes were 3-5 times reduced compared to ulnar CMAPs. Abnormal area reduction or excessive temporal dispersion of proximal CMAP was present in at least two nerves in all patients. Sural nerve biopsy showed reduction of large myelinated fibres, cluster formations, occasional onion bulbs. Teased fibres study revealed short internodes for fibre diameter, enlarged Ranvier nodes but no evidence of segmental demyelination and remyelination. DNA analysis showed an Arg(15)Gln mutation in connexin32 gene in all patients. CONCLUSIONS: In this family conduction slowing and segmental conduction abnormalities, in absence of morphological evidence of de-remyelination, may be related to short internodes, widened Ranvier nodes and the specific effect of the mutation. The occurrence in some CMTX patients of a non uniform involvement between and within nerves, as in acquired demyelinating neuropathies, should be kept in mind to avoid misdiagnoses.  相似文献   

16.
Nerve conduction velocity distribution (CVD) study is a newly-developed electrodiagnostic method for detecting alterations in the composition of nerve fibres according to their conduction velocity. The presence of subclinical neuropathy was evaluated in 138 diabetic patients by CVD study of four motor nerves (external popliteal and ulnar nerves bilaterally) and two sensory nerves (median nerve bilaterally), and the data obtained were compared with standard electrophysiological parameters in the same nerve segments. CVD studies revealed an altered distribution pattern in 106 of 129 evaluable patients for motor nerves (82%) and in 67 of 115 evaluable patients for sensory nerves (58%), while standard examination gave abnormal findings in 92 of 137 patients (67%) and in 33 of 118 patients (11%), respectively. Of the patients adequately evaluated by both techniques, 21 of 129 patients (16%) revealed altered CVD data unaccompanied by slowing of maximum nerve conduction velocity, and 37 patients of 101 (37%) showed similar findings for sensory nerves. Subclinical alterations of motor and sensory nerve CVD were not significantly related to age or to metabolic control expressed as glycated haemoglobin levels; a significantly longer duration of disease was found in patients with motor and mixed subclinical neuropathy with respect to non-neuropathic patients. The CVD study allowed us to detect subclinical abnormalities of motor and sensory nerve fibres; often this is a more sensitive method than the standard electrodiagnostic study. This method can be very useful as a diagnostic tool and in research in the study of the progression of diabetic neuropathy. Received: 21 March 1997 Received in revised form: 8 September 1997 Accepted: 7 October 1997  相似文献   

17.
The near-nerve sensory nerve conduction in the medial and lateral plantar nerves was studied in 25 cases of tarsal tunnel syndrome. Sensory nerve conduction was abnormal in 24 cases (96%) The most common abnormalities were slow nerve conduction velocities and dispersion phenomenon (prolonged duration of compound nerve action potentials). These two electrophysiological abnormalities are indicative of a focal segmental demyelination as the primary pathological process in tarsal tunnel syndrome.  相似文献   

18.
Electrophysiological studies in diabetic neuropathy   总被引:11,自引:8,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
In 30 patients with diabetic neuropathy sensory potentials in the median nerve, motor conduction in the lateral popliteal and median nerves, and electromyographic findings in distal and proximal muscles were compared with the severity of symptoms and signs. All patients had abnormalities in at least one of the electrophysiological parameters. The sensory potentials were the most sensitive indicator of subclinical involvement; abnormalities were found in 24 patients, 12 of whom had no sensory symptoms or signs and five of whom had no other clinical or electrophysiological evidence of neuropathy in the upper extremities. This indicates that sensory nerve fibres may be affected before motor. The next most sensitive parameter was the presence of fibrillation potentials, found in more than half the distal muscles examined. Slowing in motor conduction in the lateral popliteal nerve was the only electrophysiological change correlated to the severity of the neuropathy, and no other electrophysiological parameter was correlated to the duration or the severity of the neuropathy or the diabetes. An onset of neuropathy before or simultaneously with the manifestations of the diabetes, as well as the frequent occurrence of asymptomatic changes in sensory conduction, support the evidence at hand that the neuropathy develops concomitantly with and as an integral part of the metabolic disturbance rather than as a consequence of the vascular complications of diabetes. Of three patients with clinical signs or symptoms of a diabetic amyotrophy, two had asymptomatic electrophysiological abnormalities in distal nerves and muscles, consistent with widespread involvement of the peripheral nerves. The third patient had electromyographic changes in the medial vastus muscles suggestive of a myopathy. Motor and sensory conduction in distal and proximal nerves were normal.  相似文献   

19.
Morphometric and pathologic studies along the length of the peripheral nervous system were obtained in groups of rats fed 4% lead carbonate for 3 and 6 months and in match-fed controls. The number and diameter histograms of L6 cytons of spinal ganglia and of myelinated fibers of proximal and distal portions of peroneal and sural nerve were not significantly different from the control groups. On the other hand, segmental demyelination occurred approximately as frequently in proximal as in distal parts of nerves. At 3 months approximately 1/3 of teased myelinated fibers showed changes of segmental demyelination (Condition C), or of remyelination after segmental demyelination (Condition F) or of both segmental demyelination and of remyelination (Condition D), while at 6 months more than 4/5ths of fibers showed these changes. As expected, regression lines of axonal area on number of lamellae of myelin, were less steep in nerves of rats fed on lead for 6 months as compared to controls. Axonal transport of choline acetyltransferase in lead neuropathy did not differ from that in control rats. As expected from the studies of others, conduction velocity of myelinated fibers of caudal nerve were low. A new finding was the often quite striking increase of transverse fascicular area of peripheral nerves. This was due to edema which appeared to develop at about the time of onset os segmental demyelination. Although the edema may be an epiphenomenon, it could be an important observation bearing on the development of lead neuropathy. It would be important to know next whether or not the blood nerve barrier is altered in lead neuropathy.  相似文献   

20.
An electroneurographic study performed on the peripheral nerves of 25 patients with severe cirrhosis following viral hepatitis showed slight slowing (P greater than 0.05) of motor conduction velocity (CV) and significant diminution (P less than 0.001) of sensory CV and mixed sensorimotor-evoked potentials, associated with a significant decrease in the amplitude of sensory evoked potentials. The slowing was about equal in the distal (digital) and in the proximal segments of the same nerve. A mixed axonal degeneration and segmental demyelination is presumed to explain these findings. The CV measurements proved helpful for an early diagnosis of hepatic polyneuropathy showing subjective symptoms in the subclinical stage.  相似文献   

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