Gene/Protein
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Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0235394 (
wasting
)
8,040
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 53-year-old female with sensori-motor neuropathy associated with bilateral club feet was reported. She was admitted because of numbness in the bilateral feet and gait disturbance. Her parents were not related. There was no family history of any neurological diseases. She had bilateral club feet which were present at birth to developed in early childhood. She could walk, but could not run. Since 5 years prior to the admission she noted gradually increasing disturbance of gait. Neurological examination revealed muscular weakness and
wasting
in the distal parts of the lower extremities and decreased deep tendon reflexes. There were hypesthesia,
hypalgesia
and dysesthesia in the lateral portions of the bilateral feet. Deep sensation was normal. There was no weakness or
wasting
in the upper extremities. Motor nerve conduction velocities were normal and sensory nerve conduction velocities were reduced in the median nerve. No action potentials could not be elicited in the bilateral tibial and peroneal nerves. A sural nerve biopsy showed a markedly hypertrophic perineurium, 28-150 micron thick, a large Renaut body measured 140 micron by 200 micron in diameters and a markedly reduced number of the myelinated fibers. Fiber size histogram showed many unmyelinated fibers larger than 1 micron, despite loss of fibers of the usual size. Therefore, a part of the unmyelinated fibers might be demyelinated. There were no axonal degeneration and onion-bulb formation. Segmental demyelination was found in approximately 30% of the myelinated fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Sensori-motor neuropathy associated with congenital bilateral club feet: histological and ultrastructural study of the sural nerve]. 319 Sep 34
The authors report 235 cases of ulnar neuropathy at the elbow. The treatment was simple decompression in 115 cases and anterior transposition in 120 cases. Men were affected 3 times as often as women. The average age of presentation was 54.5 years. The nondominant arm was involved more frequently. The etiology of ulnar neuropathy was diverse, but one-third of the cases fell into the idiopathic category. Numbness and paresthesia were the most common complaints. Examination revealed
hypalgesia
of the little finger and the medial half of the ring finger, with weakness and
wasting
of the intrinsic muscles of the hand. Electromyography and nerve conduction studies are important for early diagnosis. Young men with a symptom duration of 1 year or less have a better chance of improvement after the operation. Both simple decompression and anterior transposition result in improvement in 82% of the cases; however, a higher percentage of full recovery was seen in the cases treated by simple decompression. This is explained by the facts that the nerve is not handled and its vital blood supply is left intact.
...
PMID:Ulnar neuropathy at the elbow: comparison of simple decompression and anterior transposition. 720 50