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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Compression neuropathy occurred in 7 patients who underwent renal transplantation. The neuropathy occurred on the same side as the surgery and was associated with the use of selfretaining retractors. Other contributing factors were presence and degree of uremia and diabetes. We suggest that self-retaining retractors be used carefully and length of application reduced to a minimum. Efficient dialysis prior to transplantation may decrease the incidence and severity of neurologic deficit by reducing the extent of uremia.
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PMID:Compression neuropathy subsequent to renal transplantation. 110 49

Compression neuropathy in the lower extremity is common. The occurrence of more than one lesion of the nerve in the same limb is less frequent. Thirteen patients with 15 cases of tarsal tunnel syndrome associated with one or more additional lesions of the sciatic nerve or its branches of the same lower extremity are presented. Electrodiagnostic studies confirmed tarsal tunnel syndrome with conduction abnormalities at a number of locations along the sciatic, common peroneal, posterior tibial, or plantar nerves by mechanical impingement, metabolic axonal abnormality, or both. Seven of the 13 patients were treated with tarsal tunnel release. Six cases treated operatively improved significantly. Surgery on a previously operated foot or the existence of diabetes mellitus carried a fair prognosis. The association of back pain with or without previous surgery did not appear to affect the outcome of the tarsal tunnel release. No improvement in symptoms was apparent in the six unoperated patients during the period of the study. Multiple lesions of the nerves of a single extremity may account for the variable success rate of tarsal tunnel release.
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PMID:Tarsal tunnel syndrome and additional nerve lesions in the same limb. 838 54

Diabetes can be associated with a number of peripheral nerve disorders. The commonest is slowly-progressive axonal distal symmetrical sensori-motor neuropathy. Sensory loss and positive sensory symptoms are its main manifestations. Lumbosacral radiculoplexus neuropathy (LSRPN) is a distinct entity, accompanied by severe lumbar, hip, leg pain and weight loss, with subsequent weakness. Although typically unilateral, bilaterality is described, with spontaneous recovery usual over several months. The upper limb counterpart, cervical radiculoplexus neuropathy is rare. Acute painful neuropathies, including "diabetic neuropathic cachexia", are infrequent. Accompanying weight loss is usual and burning pains in the extremities are severe. Insulin-triggered acute painful neuropathy is well-described although infrequent and still poorly-understood. Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) represents an immune-mediated treatable disorder, usually causing prominent diffuse motor weakness, which was described as more common in diabetics. More recent epidemiological data have however been conflicting and it is possible that CIDP is no more frequent in diabetics than in the general population. Diagnosis is made by electrophysiology and cerebrospinal fluid analysis. A painless diabetic motor neuropathy, thought to be caused by ischaemic injury and microvasculitis, has recently been postulated as separate from LSRPN and CIDP. Other focal and multifocal neuropathies that can occur in diabetics are cranial or truncal. Entrapment neuropathies are more often of median and ulnar nerves, and may in some cases benefit from decompression. Finally, autonomic neuropathies are well-described in diabetes and can be diverse in presentation with cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, urogenital and sudomotor manifestations. Their management can be difficult with debilitating symptoms despite treatment.
Curr Diabetes Rev 2012 May
PMID:Common and less common peripheral nerve disorders associated with diabetes. 2228 78

Individuals with diabetes are at a greater risk for microvascular complications, such as retinopathy, neuropathy, and nephropathy, than are individuals without diabetes. Diabetic neuropathies are complex heterogeneous disorders that include both focal neuropathies and diffuse polyneuropathy. Entrapment neuropathy is an example of a focal neuropathy, while distal symmetric polyneuropathy is the most common type of diffuse polyneuropathy. Entrapment neuropathies are highly prevalent in the diabetic population, but they develop insidiously and progressively, making it difficult to determine their true prevalence. Entrapment neuropathies are suspected to be a more common complication of diabetes than is polyneuropathy. For example, carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS)-one of the most common entrapment neuropathies encountered in patients with diabetes-results from median nerve compression, and has been shown to occur three times more frequently in a diabetic population than in a normal healthy population. Entrapment neuropathies should be actively screened for in patients showing the signs and symptoms of neuropathy, because such patients may require surgical treatment.
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PMID:[Orthopaedic neurological diseases in patient with diabetes]. 2452 13

Neuropathy is a common complication of diabetes mellitus (DM) with a wide clinical spectrum that encompasses generalized to focal and multifocal forms. Entrapment neuropathies (EN), which are focal forms, are so frequent at any stage of the diabetic disease, that they may be considered a neurophysiological hallmark of peripheral nerve involvement in DM. Indeed, EN may be the earliest neurophysiological abnormalities in DM, particularly in the upper limbs, even in the absence of a generalized polyneuropathy, or it may be superimposed on a generalized diabetic neuropathy. This remarkable frequency of EN in diabetes is underlain by a peculiar pathophysiological background. Due to the metabolic alterations consequent to abnormal glucose metabolism, the peripheral nerves show both functional impairment and structural changes, even in the preclinical stage, making them more prone to entrapment in anatomically constrained channels. This review discusses the most common and relevant EN encountered in diabetic patient in their epidemiological, pathophysiological and diagnostic features.
World J Diabetes 2016 Sep 15
PMID:Entrapment neuropathies in diabetes mellitus. 2766 Jun 94