Neuropathy Flashcards

1
Q

what are the types of neuropathy?

A

peripheral: pain/loss of feeling in feet and hands
autonomic: changes in bowel, bladder function, sexual response, sweating, heart rate, blood pressure
proximal: pain in thighs, hips, buttocks - leading to weakness in the legs (amyotrophy)

focal neuropathy: sudden weakness in one nerve or groups of nerves causing muscle weakness or pain e.g. carpal tunnel, ulnar mono-neuropathy, foot drop, bells palsy, CN palsy

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2
Q

risk factors

A
increased length of diabetes 
poor glycaemic control 
more common in T1DM 
high cholesterol/lipids
smoking 
alcohol 
genetics
mechanical injury
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3
Q

what is peripheral neuropathy?

A

distal symmetric/ sensorimotor neuropathy

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4
Q

how does peripheral neuropathy present?

A
glove stocking distribution 
numbness/insensitivity 
tingling/burning 
sharp pains or cramps 
sensitivity to touch 
loss of balance and coordination
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5
Q

what are the consequences of peripheral neuropathy?

A

charcot foot
painless trauma
foot ulcer

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6
Q

what is diabetic foot?

A

peripheral neuropathy: neuropathic ulcer, clawing of toes, glove and stocking neuropathy, dry cracked skin, callus
peripheral vascular disease: proximal arterial occlusion, digital gangrene, Charcot foot, loss of leg hair, absent pulses, cold feet

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7
Q

what is charcot arthropathy?

A

a destructive inflammatory process causing fractures/ bony destruction and deformity of the foot

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8
Q

how does charcot arthropathy present?

A

hot swollen foot in someone with neuropathy

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9
Q

how is charcat arthropathy diagnosed?

A

hard to differentiate from infection

MRI can be useful

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10
Q

how is Charcot arthropathy managed?

A

non-weight bearing (total contrast cast or airiest boot)

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11
Q

natural history of Charcot arthropathy?

A

3 months of active destruction
1-4 months of healing (months 4-8)
then chronic phase after 8 months

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12
Q

how is Charcot arthropathy screened for?

A

podiatrist annually assess at risk patients

refer to specialist if active disease

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13
Q

what is the usual development of loss of sensation?

A

usually get pain before loss of sensation

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14
Q

how to treat painful neuropathy?

A
amitriptyline 
duloxetine 
gabapentin or pregabalin 
titrate up as needed
if localised neuropathic pain and pain doesn't want/ can't tolerate oral treatments - can give topical capsaicin cream
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15
Q

what is diabetic amyotrophy?

A

amyotrophy = muscular atrophy
starts with pain in the thighs, hips, buttocks or legs - usually on 1 side of the body
more common in elderly patients with T2DM
proximal muscle weakness
associated with marked weigh loss

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16
Q

what is autonomic neuropathy?

A

affects the nerves which regulate heart rate and blood pressure
they also control internal organs
- gastric motility, respiratory function, urination, sexual function and vision

17
Q

autonomic neuropathy in the digestive system can cause?

A

constipation (gastric slowing) or diarrhoea (frequent gastric emptying) - sometimes both
Gastroparesis (slow stomach emptying) - persistent N&V, bloating and loss of appetite, can cause wide fluctuation in BG levels because of abnormal food digestion
Oesophagus nerve damage - makes it hard to swallow and can lead to weight loss

18
Q

how is gastroparesis managed?

A

improve glycaemic control
smaller and more frequent food portions - low fat, low fibre
may need liquid meals if severe
promotility drugs - metoclopramide, domperidone, erythromycin)
may need NSAIDs/analgesics (low dose tricyclic antidepressants, gabapentin, tramadol and fentanyl) for abdominal pain
botulinum toxin (works on pyloric sphincter)
gastric pacemaker

19
Q

autonomic neuropathy of the sweat glands can cause?

A

profuse sweating at night or while eating (gustatory sweating)
prevent the sweat glands from working possibly
stop the body from being able to regulate temperature properly
Anhidrosis = inability to sweat normally
Hyperhidrosis = excessive sweating

20
Q

how is sweat gland neuropathy managed?

A

topical glucopyrrolate
clondine
botulinum toxin

21
Q

affect of nerve damage in the CV system?

A

disrupts body’s ability to adjust BP and heart rate

  • postural hypertension
  • persistent high heart rate (despite change in activity)