Polyneuropathies Flashcards
Define Polyneuropathy
Peripheral or cranial neuropathies
Distribution is usually symmetrical & widespread, often distal
How are polyneuuropathies classified?
- Course: Acute/ chronic
- Function: Sensory/ Motor/ Autonomic/ Mixed
- Pathology: Demyelination/ Axonal damage/ both
Outline the typical presentation of Sensory Polyneuropathy
- Distal feet affected first
- Paraesthesiae, numbness, burning pain, loss of vibration & position sense
- Signs of bumps/ burns/ bruising
- Pain: diabetic & alcohol neuropathies
- Muscle wasting may occur
Outline the typical presentation of Autonomic Polyneuropathy
- Constipation
- Loss of bowel/ bladder control
- Orthostatic hypotension
- **Erectile dysfunction (point) **& Ejaculatory failure (& shoot)
- Skin; pale & dry
- Horner’s syndrome
- Holmes-Adie pupil
Outline the typical presentation of Motor Polyneuropathy
- Often progressive
- Weak/ clumsy hands
- Difficulting walks (fall, stumbling)
- Difficulting breathing
-
LMN Lesion signs;
- Hand & Foot DROP
- Reduced/ absent reflexes
Outline the typical presentation of Cranial Nerve Polyneuropathy
- Swallowing/ speaking difficulty
- Diplopia
Define Small Fiber Peripheral Neuropathy?
- Common presentation
- Diagnosis
Damage to small unmyelinated peripheral nerve fibers (C Fibers)
Present in;
- Skin (somatic fibers)
- Organs (autonomic fibers)
Presentation;
- Sensory symptoms (highly variable)
- Paraesthesias, Dysaethesias
Diagnosis
-
Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST) assess small fiber function by measuring temperature & vibratory sensory
- May be attributed to CNS problems though
- Limited by patients subjectivity
- Quantitative Sudomotor Axon Reflex Testing (QSART) measures sweating responce at local body sites
- Skin Biopsy to measure epidermal nerve fiber density
What is Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS)?
Outline;
- Definition
- Pathogenesis
GBS is the most common acute neuropathy
aka Acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy
Definition
- Inflammatory demyelinating (occasionally axonal) polyneuropathy
Pathogenesis
- Usually triggered by infection:
- Campylobacter jejuni
- Epstein-Barr virus
- Cytomegalovirus
- Infectious organism shares epitopes with an antigen in peripheral nerve tissue
- Ganglioside GM1 and GQ1b
- ⇒ Autoantibody mediated nerve cell damage
- Reached pinicle in 4wks then recovery
- 10% mortality
Outline the clinical features of Guillain-Barre Syndrome (GBS)
-
Progressive onset of limb weakness (usually symmetrical)
- Reaches nadir within 4 weeks → recovery
- Disability ranges from mild to severe (facial & respiratory muscle involvement)
- Proximal muscles affect (unlike other polyneuropathies)
- Reflexes lost early
- Pain common
- Rarer
- Sensory symptoms: paraesthesias. (Few signs)
- Autonomic symptoms
What is Miller Fisher syndrome?
Variant of Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS)
Affects **cranial nerves to eye muscle: **opthalmoplegia & ataxia
What is Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculopathy (CIDP)?
Guillain-Barre characterized by slow onset & recovery
How do you investigate Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS)?
- Clinical diagnosis
- Nerve conduction studies
- Slow motor conduction
- Prolonged distal motor latency
- Conduction block
- CSF protein non-specifically elevated (+ normal sugar & cell count)
How do you investigate Miller Fisher syndrome?
Autoantibodies again GQb1 have sensitivity of 90%
Ouline the management of Guillain-Barre syndrome
- Monitoring
- Vital capacity/ 4hr (resp weakness)
- <80% predicted = ITU (/ mechanical ventilation)
- ECG (arrythmias)
- Vital capacity/ 4hr (resp weakness)
- Treatment
- IV Immunogloblin for 5d
- Contraindications: IgA deficiency
- Plasma exchange
- IV Immunogloblin for 5d
- Supportive treatment
- Heparin (thrombosis)
- Physio
- Tube feeding (swallowing difficulty)
Outline Thiamine deficiency neuropathy
Outline;
- Demographic
- Presentation
- Treatment
Thiamine aka Vitamin B1 deficiency
- Demographic
- Alcoholics
- Starvation
- Beriberi [milled rice]
- Presentation
- Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome
- Cardiac failure
- Polyneuropathy (sensory, occasionally motor)
- Treatment
- Thiamine (250mg IM/IV/ 3d)
- Not parenteral: Anaphylaxis occurs
- Thiamine (250mg IM/IV/ 3d)