Diagnostic Tests for Diabetic neuropathy
Diabetic neuropathy Tests: Book Excerpts
Home Diagnostic Testing
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Diabetic neuropathy Diagnosis: Book Excerpts
Tests and diagnosis discussion for Diabetic neuropathy:
A doctor diagnoses neuropathy based on symptoms
and a physical exam. During the exam, the doctor may check muscle
strength, reflexes, and sensitivity to position, vibration, temperature,
and light touch. Sometimes special tests are also used to help determine
the cause of symptoms and to suggest treatment.
A simple screening test to check point sensation in the
feet can be done in the doctor's office. The test uses a nylon filament
mounted on a small wand. The filament delivers a standardized 10-gram
force when touched to areas of the foot. Patients who cannot sense
pressure from the filament have lost protective sensation and are at risk
for developing neuropathic foot ulcers. Physicians may order the filament
(with instructions for use) free from the Lower Extremity Amputation
Prevention Program, (LEAP) Bureau of Primary Health Care, Division of
Programs for Special Populations, 4350 East West Highway, 9th floor,
Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone (301) 594-4424.
Nerve conduction studies check the flow of electrical
current through a nerve. With this test, an image of the nerve impulse is
projected on a screen as it transmits an electrical signal. Impulses that
seem slower or weaker than usual indicate possible damage to the nerve.
This test allows the doctor to assess the condition of all the nerves in
the arms and legs.
Electromyography (EMG) is used to see how well muscles
respond to electrical impulses transmitted by nearby nerves. The
electrical activity of the muscle is displayed on a screen. A response
that is slower or weaker than usual suggests damage to the nerve or
muscle. This test is often done at the same time as nerve conduction
studies.
Ultrasound employs sound waves. The sound waves are too
high to hear, but they produce an image showing how well the bladder and
other parts of the urinary tract are functioning.
Nerve biopsy involves removing a sample of nerve tissue
for examination. This test is most often used in research settings.
If your doctor suspects autonomic neuropathy, you may also be referred
to a physician who specializes in digestive disorders (gastroenterologist)
for additional tests.
(Source: excerpt from Diabetic Neuropathy The Nerve Damage of Diabetes: NIDDK)
Diagnosis of Diabetic neuropathy: medical news summaries:
The following medical news items
are relevant to diagnosis of Diabetic neuropathy:
Diagnostic Tests for Diabetic neuropathy: Online Medical Books
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Review excerpts from medical books online, free, without registration,
for more information about the diagnostic tests for Diabetic neuropathy.
Peripheral Neuropathy:
Diagnostic Approach
(Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis)
Sensory neuropathy symptoms include positive phenomena such as tingling; pins/needles; and burning, cold, or lancinating pain. Physical findings include weakness, fasciculations, atrophy, ataxia, wide-based gait, abnormal sweating, decreased or absent deep tendon reflexes, orthostatic hypotension, hypesthesia surrounded by a zone of hyperesthesia, and vibration or position sense affected before pinprick or temperature sense.
Autonomic neuropathy symptoms include impotence, retrograde ejaculation, diaphoresis, incontinence, urinary retention, constipation, diarrhea, orthostatic dizziness, and flushing. Physical findings include delayed pupillary light response, resting tachycardia, sinus arrhythmia, and orthostatic hypotension.
Sensory loss confined to part of a limb suggests injury to a peripheral nerve, plexus, or spinal root, resulting from trauma, entrapment, or vascular insufficiency. Mononeuropathy multiplex affects multiple nerves over time (e.g., due to diabetes or vasculitis). Polyneuropathy occurs in a stocking-glove distribution starting with the longest nerves, and is due to axonal neuropathy, with a toxic or metabolic origin. Bilaterally symmetrical symptoms are found in polyneuropathy or spinal cord lesions, while unilateral involvement is seen in contralateral disease of the brainstem, thalamus, or cortex.
Injury to large myelinated nerves produces decreased light touch and proprioception with a sensation of “walking on a thick carpet” or imbalance. Injury to medium fibers causes decreased light touch and vibration sense. Injury to small unmyelinated fibers, as occurs in diabetes or amyloidosis, decreases pain and temperature sensation and produces dysesthesias. Disproportionate loss of vibration sense and proprioception compared with pain and temperature sensation occurs with diseases of the dorsal column of the spinal cord (e.g., neurosyphilis, vitamin B 12 deficiency, or multiple sclerosis) and demyelinating polyneuropathy.
Transverse cord lesions produce loss of all modalities below the level of the lesion and a band of hyperalgesia at the level of the lesion. Lateral cord compression is heralded by early sensory changes. Dorsal cord compression affects proprioception and tactile discrimination without pain or temperature loss. Pernicious anemia and tabes dorsalis preferentially affect the dorsal columns.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Field Guide to Bedside Diagnosis, 2007
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