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The function of large and small nerve fibers in renal failure
Author(s) -
AngusLeppan Heather,
Burke David
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
muscle and nerve
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.025
H-Index - 145
eISSN - 1097-4598
pISSN - 0148-639X
DOI - 10.1002/mus.880150306
Subject(s) - afferent , median nerve , polyneuropathy , sensory system , medicine , nerve fiber , electrophysiology , nerve conduction , nerve conduction velocity , sensory nerve , neuroscience , anatomy , psychology
Previous clinical and neurophysiological studies of uremic neuropathy have focused almost exclusively on the function of large sensory and motor axons. The sensations of heat and cold depend on the function of unmyelinated afferents and small myelinated afferents, respectively, and these sensations can be quantified using a standardized psychophysical technique. Thermal thresholds were measured in 20 patients with end‐stage renal failure to determine the extent of small afferent fiber involvement and to compare this with the clinical and electrophysiological evidence of large fiber involvement. Whereas abnormalities of standard nerve conduction studies were found in 16 patients, abnormal thermal thresholds were found in only 6 patients. In the nerve conduction studies, the amplitudes of nerve potentials were reduced more than their conduction velocities, consistent with an axonopathy. This study found little evidence of significant dysfunction of small afferent fibers in end‐stage renal failure and, when such changes occurred, they did not correlate with the clinical evidence of polyneuropathy. The functional sparing of axons of small diameter is consistent with the relative sparing of these axons in pathological studies.