Nutrición hospitalaria : organo oficial de la Sociedad Española de Nutrición Parenteral y Enteral
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Neuromuscular pathology in the critically ill patient develops within two settings: primary neurological diseases that require admission in the Intensive Care Medicine Unit for close monitoring or mechanical ventilation, and peripheral nervous system manifestations secondary to critical systemic diseases. The most frequent conditions in the first group are Guillain-Barré syndrome and Myasthenia Gravis, and in the second group, polyneuropathy and myopathy of the critically ill patient. The most commonly shared clinical pattern is the development of severe weakness and quadriplegia which most typical manifestation is the need for assisted ventilation and/or weaning difficulty/impossibility. ⋯ Myopathy of the critically ill patient involves the muscle and provokes a generalized weakness with quadriplegia, very similar to that from polyneuropathy, which prevents or delays weaning from mechanical ventilation, and which may lead to CPK and myoglobin increase in more advanced stages, together with changes in neurophysiological examination. The findings of neurophysiological examination are difficult to differentiate from those encountered in polyneuropathy, although normal sensitive action potentials and reduction of motor action potentials with direct muscle stimulation may help in the differentiation. The functional prognosis of primary muscle impairments tends to be quite good, but both polyneuropathy and myopathy resolve very slowly along weeks or months, with the possibility of an important residual deficit within two years in the most severe cases.