Clinical autonomic research : official journal of the Clinical Autonomic Research Society
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The five different types of the rare hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies (HSAN) are classified by their mode of inheritance, pathology, natural history, biochemical, neurophysiologic and autonomic abnormalities. Clinically, the different types of HSANs can be identified by a detailed history and examination and 'bedside' tests of sympathetic or parasympathetic function such as active standing, metronomic breathing or the Valsalva maneuver, sensory and motor nerve conduction studies, quantitative sensory testing of thermal and vibratory perception, and the analysis of sudomotor function by recordings of the sympathetic skin response (SSR) or the sweat output during quantitative sudomotor axon reflex testing (QSART). The slowly progressive, symmetrical HSAN type I manifests between the second and fourth decade with ulcers or mutilations of the lower extremities, low normal sensory and motor nerve conduction velocities, but abnormal warm, cold and heat pain perception and distal anhidrosis. ⋯ Patients develop severe mutilations e. g. of the tip of their tongue, they might have severe burn injuries and multiple, unnoticed fractures with neuropathic joints. Children with the very rare HSAN type V respond normally to tactile, vibratory or thermal stimuli, but have a selective loss of pain perception with otherwise normal neurological examination. Painful stimuli reveal no signs of discomfort.