38 results match your criteria: "Diabetic Lumbosacral Plexopathy"
Presse Med
July 2005
Laboratoire d'Electromyographie, Hôpital de la Salpêtriere, Paris.
Introduction: Lumbosacral plexopathy is the equivalent in the lower limbs of neuralgic amyotrophy (also known as Parsonage-Turner syndrome) in the upper limbs. It is well-known in patients with diabetes mellitus, when it is known as Bruns-Garland syndrome.
Case: We report the case of a 47-year-old woman who developed a unilateral neuropathy of the leg, neither radicular nor truncal in origin.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil
March 2005
Section of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Philadelphia Veterans Administration Medical Center and University of Pennylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Unlabelled: This self-directed learning module highlights mononeuropathies. It is part of the chapter on neuromuscular rehabilitation and electrodiagnosis in the Self-Directed Physiatric Education Program for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation. This article specifically focuses on diagnostic criteria and classifications of mononeuropathies, including carpal tunnel, brachial neuritis, and lumbosacral plexopathy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Neurol Scand
April 2003
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Room 182A, University of Calgary, 3330 Hospital Drive N.W., Calgary, Alberta, Canada, T2N 4N1.
Three patients are described who had severe and progressive diabetic lumbosacral plexopathy despite active immunosuppressive therapy. One patient developed the condition while immunosuppressed for a cardiac transplant and two others progressed while receiving intravenous gamma globulin. The cases raise questions about current unsupported practices of treatment for this condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Treat Options Neurol
January 2000
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Calgary, Room 182A, 3330 Hospital Drive, N.W., Calgary, Alberta T2N 4N1, Canada.
There are currently no treatments available (beyond optimal control of hyperglycemia) that arrest or reverse progressive diabetic polyneuropathy. Consultation with a diabetologist is indicated for patients with poorly controlled disease and polyneuropathy. Immunotherapy for diabetic lumbosacral plexopathy has been advocated but is not supported to date by class 1 clinical trial evidence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain
July 1997
Neurosciences Research Group, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Microangiopathy is considered relevant to the pathogenesis of several forms of peripheral nerve disease, particularly diabetic polyneuropathy. In diabetes, however, it is uncertain whether reductions in mixed nerve trunk blood flow account for early features of polyneuropathy in contrast to later disease, where microvascular changes have been described. To address this issue, we measured local sural nerve blood flow in patients with mild diabetic polyneuropathy who were enrolled in a clinical trial (n = 26), patients with other polyneuropathies being studied by diagnostic sural nerve biopsy (n = 17), patients with vasculitic polyneuropathy (n = 3) and one patient with rapidly progressive severe diabetic polyneuropathy and lumbosacral plexopathies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Neurol Sci
February 1997
Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Background: Lumbosacral plexopathy is a complication of diabetes mellitus. Conn's syndrome from an aldosterone secreting adenoma may be associated with hypokalemia and rhabdomyolysis but mild hyperglycemia also usually occurs.
Methods: Case description.
Semin Neurol
June 1996
Department of Neurology, Saint Vincents Hospital and Medical Center of New York, New York Medical College, NY 10011, USA.
Diabetic amyotrophy is a disabling illness that is distinct from other forms of diabetic neuropathy. It is characterized by weakness followed by wasting of pelvifemoral muscles, either unilaterally or bilaterally, with associated pain. Sensory impairment is minimal in the cutaneous distribution sharing the same root or peripheral nerve as affected musculature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBaillieres Clin Neurol
April 1994
Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota 55905.
Sporadic acute brachial plexus neuropathy occurs in approximately 1.64/100,000 population, but may present in epidemic form. Sporadic lumbosacral plexus neuropathy is far less common and has to be distinguished from more common disorders affecting the plexus and roots such as diabetes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Med Suisse Romande
January 1991
Service de neurologie, Centre hospitalier universitaire vaudois, Lausanne.
J Urol
January 1990
Renal Transplant Program, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland.
Radiographics
May 1986
Department of Radiology, University of Michigan Hospitals, Ann Arbor.
Before high resolution computed tomography (CT), the lumbosacral plexus was nearly impossible to image. While individual elements of the plexus are not consistently resolved using CT, the regional anatomy is reproducible and allows accurate evaluation. Normal regional anatomy was established by axial cadaver dissection and review of 233 normal computed tomographic examinations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pathophysiologic processes underlying plexus lesions and their recognition by electromyographic examination are detailed in this article. The nerve conduction studies most helpful for localization of plexopathies are discussed, and the electromyographic findings of the most commonly encountered plexopathies are described.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSix patients had a syndrome of painful lumbosacral plexopathy and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Sural nerve biopsy in each case showed axonal degeneration and epineurial arterioles surrounded by mononuclear inflammatory cells. Differential fascicular involvement suggested an ischemic cause in three nerves, but no patient had a necrotizing vasculitis.
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