Journal of the neurological sciences
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The trigeminal ganglion, roots and the initial portion of the ophthalmic, maxillary and mandibular nerves were dissected in 3 cadavers, to study the number, area and composition of the fascicles, and the density and diameter spectra of myelinated fibers. The total number of fibers (x 1000) was 26 in the ophthalmic, 50 in the maxillary, and 78 in the mandibular division, 7.7 in the motor root and 170 in the sensory root. In all nerves, the histograms of fiber diameter had a bimodal distribution. ⋯ The findings in the three peripheral divisions agree with electrophysiological data about sensory and motor conduction in human trigeminal nerves. The observation that the ophthalmic and maxillary nerves have similar fiber spectra indicates that a special fiber composition does not account for the sparing of the ophthalmic division in trigeminal neuralgia. The absence of very large (A alpha) fibers in the sensory root does not support the view that impulses from muscle spindles are conducted along this root.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The combined effects of clonidine and cyproheptadine with interactive training on the modulation of locomotion in spinal cord injured subjects.
The combined effects of a noradrenergic agonist, clonidine, and a serotonergic antagonist, cyproheptadine, together with an interactive locomotor training program incorporating progressive body weight support and treadmill walking exercise, were investigated in two chronic spinal cord injured subjects. Both subjects had no independent locomotor ability due to severe spasticity. Kinematic, temporal distance and electromyographic (EMG) data were collected during treadmill walking. ⋯ Previously wheelchair-bound, both patients became functionally ambulatory overground with the aid of Canadian crutches. Thus, a potentially effective strategy for facilitating the expression of the locomotor pattern following spinal cord injury is proposed. This preliminary study showed that such a treatment strategy could possibly lead to a recovery of locomotor function in some chronic, wheelchair-bound spinal cord injured patients who had previously been stabilized on conventional therapies.
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A qualitative and quantitative study was made of early changes in nerves from 10 patients with tuberculoid or lepromatous type of leprosy. Five nerve biopsies, taken from sites remote from skin lesions, were considered to be unaffected when examined by paraffin histology but showed abnormalities in semi-thin resin sections and by electron microscopy; 5 showed mild to moderate involvement by paraffin histology. Changes in 'unaffected' nerves in both types of leprosy included the presence of subperineurial oedema; occasional evidence of fibre regeneration, sometimes with atypical features; increased numbers of small myelinated fibres, possibly a consequence of axonal atrophy; a few thinly remyelinated fibres, probably due to secondary demyelination, and some loss of unmyelinated axons. ⋯ Demyelination was not a conspicuous feature; there was evidence of axonal atrophy in some fibres. Similarities in some of the changes observed in tuberculoid and lepromatous types of leprosy suggest a common mechanism of nerve damage, at least in the early stages. The presence of abnormalities in nerves at a distance from skin lesions implies a more diffuse nerve involvement than might have been expected in both types of leprosy.
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Vibratory perception thresholds (VPTs) and thermal discrimination thresholds (TDTs), reflecting large nerve fiber function and small nerve fiber function, respectively, were determined in 20 diabetics with painful sensory polyneuropathy and in 20 diabetics without neuropathic symptoms. VPTs were elevated in 27 patients and proved to be significantly higher in the group with painful neuropathy (p less than 0.01). Yet in three symptomatic patients, VPTs were normal. ⋯ All patients with painful neuropathy had elevated TDTs. These findings confirm the relationship between pain in diabetic neuropathy and the affection of small fiber function. When monitoring of peripheral nerve function in patients with painful diabetic neuropathy is required, quantitation of thermal cutaneous sensation provides useful information on the function of small nerve fibers.