Diabetic neuropathy—a review

G Said - Nature clinical practice Neurology, 2007 - nature.com
G Said
Nature clinical practice Neurology, 2007nature.com
Diabetic neuropathy is the most common neuropathy in industrialized countries, and it is
associated with a wide range of clinical manifestations. The vast majority of patients with
clinical diabetic neuropathy have a distal symmetrical form of the disorder that progresses
following a fiber-length-dependent pattern, with sensory and autonomic manifestations
predominating. This pattern of neuropathy is associated with a progressive distal
axonopathy. Patients experience pain, trophic changes in the feet, and autonomic …
Abstract
Diabetic neuropathy is the most common neuropathy in industrialized countries, and it is associated with a wide range of clinical manifestations. The vast majority of patients with clinical diabetic neuropathy have a distal symmetrical form of the disorder that progresses following a fiber-length-dependent pattern, with sensory and autonomic manifestations predominating. This pattern of neuropathy is associated with a progressive distal axonopathy. Patients experience pain, trophic changes in the feet, and autonomic disturbances. Occasionally, patients with diabetes can develop focal and multifocal neuropathies that include cranial nerve involvement and limb and truncal neuropathies. This neuropathic pattern tends to occur after 50 years of age, and mostly in patients with long-standing diabetes mellitus. Length-dependent diabetic polyneuropathy does not show any trend towards improvement, and either relentlessly progresses or remains relatively stable over a number of years. Conversely, the focal diabetic neuropathies, which are often associated with inflammatory vasculopathy on nerve biopsies, remain self-limited, sometimes after a relapsing course.
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