Physiological characterization of neuropathy in Fabry's disease
- PMID: 12402283
- DOI: 10.1002/mus.10236
Physiological characterization of neuropathy in Fabry's disease
Abstract
Fabry's disease is commonly associated with a painful, debilitating neuropathy. Characterization of the physiological abnormalities is an important step in evaluating response to specific therapies. Twenty-two patients with Fabry's disease, and with relatively preserved renal function, underwent conventional and near-nerve conduction studies, electromyography, sympathetic skin responses, and quantitative sensory testing (QST). Nerve conduction studies were mostly normal except for an increased frequency of median nerve entrapment at the wrist in 6 (27%) patients. Sympathetic skin responses were preserved in 19 of 20 (95%) of the patients. The QST showed increased or immeasurable cold and warm detection thresholds in patients, significantly different from controls (n = 28) in the hand (P < 0.001, P = 0.04, respectively) and foot (P < 0.001 for both). Cold thresholds were more often abnormal than were warm thresholds. Vibration thresholds were normal in the feet and, in some patients, elevated in the hand only, probably due to frequent median nerve entrapment at the wrist. Our findings suggest that the neuropathy of Fabry's disease is characterized by an increased prevalence of median nerve entrapment at the wrist and by thermal afferent fiber dysfunction in a length-dependent fashion, with greater impairment of cold than warm sensation.
Copyright 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Muscle Nerve 26: 622-629, 2002
Comment in
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Quantitative sensation testing in small-diameter sensory fiber neuropathy.Muscle Nerve. 2002 Nov;26(5):595-6. doi: 10.1002/mus.10255. Muscle Nerve. 2002. PMID: 12402280 No abstract available.
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