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Comparative Study
. 1983 Sep;61(1):135-48.
doi: 10.1016/0022-510x(83)90060-6.

Peripheral and central sensory nerve conduction in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and comparison with Friedreich's ataxia

Comparative Study

Peripheral and central sensory nerve conduction in Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and comparison with Friedreich's ataxia

S J Jones et al. J Neurol Sci. 1983 Sep.

Abstract

Somatosensory evoked potentials were recorded in response to stimulation of the median nerve at the wrist and the elbow in 14 cases of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTD). Cervical and cortical latencies were used to derive conduction times and velocities over peripheral and central segments of the pathway. Sensory conduction velocities between the wrist and the elbow were distributed bimodally (12-27 m/s and 36-70 m/s), but did not correspond with the bimodality of motor conduction velocity values in 4 cases. Three patients had severely slowed sensory conduction in one arm but only moderate slowing in the other. In the majority of cases sensory conduction was considerably faster from the elbow to the spinal cord than from the wrist to the elbow. This was most apparent in 2 young patients, suggesting that demyelination secondary to axonal degeneration may gradually progress from distal to proximal segments. Compared with a group of Friedreich's ataxia (FA) patients, almost all CMTD cases could be distinguished by a greater degree of peripheral conduction slowing (not significant in FA). In FA there was a much higher incidence of impaired conduction over central segments of the somatosensory pathway, although evidence of this was also seen in 5 CMTD cases. Three of the latter had presented with atypical symptoms suggestive of CNS involvement, and also had delayed visual evoked potentials.

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