Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Peripheral neuropathies
- Hereditary motor sensory neuropathies
- -> symmetrical
slowly
progressive
distal muscular
wasting
- type I
- aka peroneal muscular
atrophy
(Charcot-Marie-Tooth
disease)
- dominantly
inherited
- commonest
type
- affected
nerves
hypertrophy
- due to demyelination
fb attempts @
remyelination
- so nerve
biopsy shows
'onion bulb
formation'
- onset
- 1st
decade
- presentation
- distal
atrophy
- pes
cavus
- legs>
arms
affected
- distal sensory
loss &
diminished
reflexes
- rare
- loss of walking ability is rare
- initial presentation
of Friedreich ataxia
can be similar
- chronic
course
- acute post-infectious polyneuropathy (Guillain-Barre syn)
- presentation
- 2-3 weeks ff
- upper resp tract infection
- campylobacter gastroenteritis
- fleeting
abnormal
sensory sx in
legs
- prominent feature
- ascending symmetrical weakness
- w/ loss of reflexes
- & autonomic involvement
- sensory sx in distal limbs
- bulbar mm involvement
- difficulty chewing &
swallowing
- risk of aspiration
- max mm weakness
- occurs 2-4 weeks after
onset of illness
- full recovery
expected in
95% of cases
- may take up
to 2 years
- Ix
- CSF
protein
- sig raised
- characteristic
- may not be seen till 2nd wk of illness
- CSF
WCC
- not raised
- nerve
conduction
velocities
- reduced
- Mx
- supportive
- respiration
- ventilator
- NOT USEFUL
- corticosteroids
- immunoglobulin
infusion
- reduce time on ventilator
- if unsuccessful
- use plasma exchange
- Bell palsy & facial nerve palsies
- Bell's palsy
- isolated lower motor
neurone paresis of CN7
- -> facial weakness
- aetiology unclear
- but probably
post-infectious
- assoc w/ herpes
simplex in adults
- Mx
- Rx
- corticosteroids
- to reduce oedema
in the facial canal
during the 1st
week
- NO
USE
- aciclovir
- recovery may take several
months
- complications
- conjunctival infection
- caused by
incomplete
eye
closure on
blinking
- eye protection or tarsorrhaphy
- differential diag
- features
of Bell's +
sx of CN7
paresis
- compressive
lesion in
cerebellopontine
angle
- most likely diag
- painful vesicles
on tonsillar
fauces, external
ear
- due to HSV
invading
geniculate
ganglion
- Rx = aciclovir
- hypertension
- cos assocn btw Bell's
palsy and coarctatin of
aorta
- if facial weakness bilat
- sarcoidosis
- Lyme disease