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Peripheral NEUROPATHIES 

•  Peripheral neuropathy (PN) describes disorders of peripheral nerves,

including the dorsal or ventral nerve roots (radiculopathy); dorsal root
ganglia; brachial or lumbosacral plexus (plexopathy); cranial nerves (except
I and II); and other sensory, motor, autonomic, or mixed nerves
(neuropathy).

•  PN are classified according to the following criteria:

1-pathology: demyelinating; axonal or mixed.

2-size: small or large nerve fibers.

3-function: sensory; motor; autonomic, or mixed.

4-distribution:

•  Polyneuropathy involves widespread and symmetric dysfunction of

the peripheral nerves.

• 

Mononeuropathies involves individual peripheral nerve

(mononeuropathy simplex)

or multiple individual peripheral nerves

(

mononeuropathy multiplex)

•  plexopathy

•  Etiology:

•  Metabolic/endocrine:  Diabetes  mellitus,  Chronic  renal  failure,

hypothyroidism.

•  Infective:

HIV/AIDS, syphilis, leprosy, diphtheria, lyme disease.

•  Immune-mediated/inflammatory: Guillain Barre Syndrome

GBS, chronic

inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy (CIDP),or vasculitic (Polyarteritis


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nodosa, Churg-Strauss disease, SLE, Rheumatoid arthritis, and Sjögren's
disease).

•  Toxic:

HIV drugs, anticancer drugs, alcohol, heavy metals (lead, thallium

and arsenic).

• 

Nutritional:

vitamin B12, B1, B6 deficiencies. 

•  Hereditary: Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT). 

MONONEUROPATHY The most common causes are compression, entrapment,
trauma.

In  an  entrapment  neuropathy,  pressure  initially  damages  the  myelin  sheath  but 
sustained or severe pressure damages the integrity of the axons

.

  

•  Certain conditions increase the propensity to develop entrapment 

neuropathies.These include acromegaly, hypothyroidism, pregnancy,  
diabetes mellitus, and bone damage near the nerve (e.g.rheumatoid arthritis). 

•  Common entrapment neuropathies include  
1.Carpal tunnel syndrome: due to median nerve compression at the wrist. Patients 
complain of pain and paraesthesia on palmar aspect of one or both hands and 
fingers, waking the patient from sleep. Pain may extend to arm and shoulder. 
2. Ulnar nerve at the cubital tunnel  
3.Meralgia paraesthetica  due to compression of lateral cutaneous nerve of the 
thigh at the inguinal ligament. 
 
POLYNEUROPATHY: 

ACUTE INFLAMMATORY DEMYELINATING POLYNEUROPATHY (GUILLAIN-BARRÉ 
SYNDROME): 

•  This develops 1-4 weeks after respiratory infection or diarrhea (particularly 

Campylobacter) in 70% of patients. 

•  It is mainly a demyelinating neuropathy but axonal destruction may occur in 

severe cases. 


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•  GBS is a heterogeneous group of immune mediated conditions. 
•  GBS variants are associated with specific antigaglioside antibodies. 
 
Clinical features 
•  GBS manifests as rapidly evolving 

areflexic motor paralysis with or without 

sensory disturbance

•  The usual pattern is an 

ascending paralysis

 from lower to upper limbs, more 

marked proximally than distally. 

•  Weakness typically evolves over hours to a few days and is frequently 

accompanied by paraesthesia and limb pains (often severe) in the 
extremities. 

•  Facial (often bilateral) and bulbar weakness commonly develops. 
• 

Respiratory weakness 

requiring ventilatory support occurs in 20% of cases. 

• 

Autonomic involvement

 is common and may occur even in patients whose 

GBS is otherwise mild.The usual manifestations are wide fluctuation in 
blood pressure, postural hypotension, and cardiac dysrhythmias. 

• 

In most patients, weakness progresses for 1-3 weeks, but rapid deterioration 
to respiratory failure can develop within hours. 

 

•  An unusual variant described by 

Miller Fisher

 comprises the triad of 

ophthalmoplegia, ataxia and areflexia. 

• 

Fever and constitutional symptoms are absent at the onset and, if present, 
cast doubt on the diagnosis.

 

•  If bladder dysfunction is a prominent feature and comes early in the course, 

diagnostic possibilities other than GBS should be considered, particularly 
spinal cord disease. 

 
Investigations 

•  The CSF protein is elevated after 10 days of illness but typically no rise in 

CSF cells (

albuminocytologic dissociation

•  Electrophysiological studies are often normal in the early stages but show 

typical changes after a week or so, with conduction block and velocity 
slowing (demyelination). 

•  Antibodies to gangliosides GM1 may be found in 25%.  

 


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Differential diagnosis  

1-  Periodic paralysis  
2-  Myelitis  
3-  Botulism  
4-  Myasthenia  
5-  Poliomyelitis  
6-  Diphtheria  

 
Management 
 
•  During the phase of deterioration, regular monitoring of respiratory function is 

required. 

•  Ventilation  may  be  needed  if  the  vital  capacity  falls  below  1  liter,  but 

endotracheal intubation is more often required because of bulbar incompetence 
leading to aspiration. 

•  Corticosteroid therapy has been shown to be ineffective. 

• 

Plasma exchange and intravenous immunoglobulin therapy shorten the duration 
of ventilation and improve prognosis, provided treatment is started within 14 days 
of the onset of symptoms. 

 

•  IVIg is administered as five daily infusions for a total dose of 2 g/kg body weight

.

 

 
Prognosis 

•   

Approximately 85% of patients with GBS achieve a full functional recovery 

within several months to a year.

 

•  The mortality rate is <5% in optimal settings; death usually results from 

secondary pulmonary complications and the remainder suffer residual 
neurological disability which can be severe. 

 

 

 
 
 
 


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CHRONIC INFLAMMATORY DEMYELINATING POLYNEUROPATHY 
(CIDP): 
 

• 

CIDP is an immune-mediated relapsing or slowly progressive generalised 
neuropathy

•  Sensory, motor or autonomic nerves can be involved but the signs are 

usually predominantly motor. 

• 

Cranial nerve involvement is rare.

 

• 

It is demyelinating neuropathy.

 

• 

There is also albuminocytologic dissociation in CSF.

 

•  CIDP usually responds to immunosuppressive treatment, corticosteroids or 

cyclophosphamide, or to immunomodulatory treatments (plasma exchange 
or intravenous immunoglobulin, IVIg). 

•  Some 10% of patients with acquired demyelinating polyneuropathy have an 

abnormal serum paraprotein, sometimes associated with a 
lymphoproliferative malignancy.  

 
 
Hereditary neuropathy 

(Charcot- Marie- Tooth)

 CMT 

•  Members of this group of syndromes have different clinical and genetic 

features. 

•  The most common is autosomal dominant CMT (type 1) 

•  Common signs are distal wasting (stork leg , pes cavus) 

•  Predominantly motor involvement. 
 

 
  

 
 
 

 
 




رفعت المحاضرة من قبل: Ahmed monther Aljial
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