1.The usefulness of minimal F-wave latency and sural/radial amplitude ratio in diabetic polyneuropathy.
Jung Bin SHIN ; Yeon Jae SEONG ; Hong Jae LEE ; Sang Hyun KIM ; Huen SUK ; Yun Jung LEE
Yonsei Medical Journal 2000;41(3):393-397
The possibility of whether minimal F-wave latency and a simple ratio between the sural and superficial radial sensory response amplitudes may provide a useful electrodiagnostic test in diabetic patients was investigated in this report. To evaluate the diagnostic sensitivity of minimal F-wave latency, the Z-scores of the minimal F-wave latency, motor nerve conduction velocity (MCV), amplitude of compound muscle action potentials (CMAP), and distal latency (DL) of the median, ulnar, tibial, and peroneal nerve were compared in 37 diabetic patients. For the median, ulnar, and tibial nerves, the Z scores of the minimal F-wave latency were significantly larger than those of the MCV. In addition for all four motor nerves, the Z scores of the minimal F-wave latency were significantly larger than those for the CMAP amplitude. Furthermore, 19 subjects showing abnormal results in the standard sensory nerve conduction study had a significantly lower sural/radial amplitude ratio (SRAR), and 84% of them had an SRAR of less than 0.5. In conclusion, minimal F-wave latency and the ratio between the amplitudes of the sural and superficial radial sensory nerve action potential are sensitive measures for the detection of nerve pathology and should be considered in electrophysiologic studies of diabetic polyneuropathy.
Aged
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Diabetic Neuropathies/physiopathology
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Diabetic Neuropathies/diagnosis*
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Electrodiagnosis*
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Female
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Human
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Male
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Middle Age
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Polyneuropathies/physiopathology
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Polyneuropathies/diagnosis*
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Radial Nerve/physiopathology*
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Reaction Time
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Sural Nerve/physiopathology*
2.A Case of Acute Polyneuropathy with Nephrotic Syndrome Showing Transient Proximal Sensory Conduction Defects.
Jeeyoung OH ; Seung Min KIM ; Il Nam SUNWOO
Yonsei Medical Journal 2012;53(2):446-449
Acute sensorimotor polyneuropathy that resembles Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) is rarely accompanied with nephrotic syndrome, and its underlying immunological mechanisms are unclear. A 56-year-old man presented with simultaneous acute progressive symmetric sensorimotor polyneuropathy and proteinuria. A kidney biopsy revealed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. Serial electrophysiologic studies showed only a transient proximal conduction block in the median nerve, stimulated somatosensory evoked potential and prolonged terminal latencies of the median and peroneal nerves. The patient's neurologic deficits and kidney dysfunction recovered with corticosteroid treatment. Our case showed that somatosensory evoked potential study can be an important objective tool in the diagnosis of acute polyneuropathy with normal distal nerve conduction and that corticosteroids should be considered in the initial treatment of GBS-resembling polyneuropathy associated with nephrotic syndrome.
Evoked Potentials, Somatosensory/physiology
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Nephrotic Syndrome/*diagnosis/*physiopathology
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Polyneuropathies/*diagnosis/*physiopathology
3.Asymptomatic electrophysiologic carpal tunnel syndrome in diabetics: entrapment or polyneuropathy.
Woo Kyung KIM ; Soon Hee KWON ; Soong Hyun LEE ; Il Nam SUNWOO
Yonsei Medical Journal 2000;41(1):123-127
Electrophysiologic carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) is common and is frequently asymptomatic in diabetics. In order to evaluate the clinical significance of asymptomatic electrophysiologic CTS, the nerve conduction studies (NCS) of 48 diabetics with asymptomatic electrophysiologic CTS were compared with those of 56 age and gender-matched controls, as well as 50 patients with symptomatic CTS without diabetes. Nerve conduction velocities of the ulnar, peroneal, and posterior tibial nerves were significantly slower in diabetics with asymptomatic electrophysiologic CTS than in normal controls. Compared to symptomatic non-diabetic CTS, there was also significant slowing of the median and ulnar nerve conduction velocities in asymptomatic diabetic CTS. However, in diabetics with asymptomatic CTS, abnormalities of the distal segment of the median NCS were more prominent compared with those of all the other tested nerves. These findings suggested that asymptomatic electrophysiologic CTS in diabetics is a manifestation of increased vulnerability to the entrapment of the peripheral nerve.
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome/physiopathology*
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Carpal Tunnel Syndrome/complications*
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Diabetes Mellitus/complications*
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Diabetic Neuropathies/physiopathology
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Electrophysiology
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Female
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Human
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Male
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Middle Age
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Nerve Compression Syndromes/physiopathology
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Neural Conduction
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Polyneuropathies/physiopathology
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Reference Values