Volume 18, Issue 1 pp. 85-92
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Mixed nerve action potentials in acquired demyelinating polyneuropathy

Carlos A. Luciano MD

Corresponding Author

Carlos A. Luciano MD

Electromyography Laboratory, Office of the Clinical Director, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

Building 10, Room 5C101, NINDS, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892Search for more papers by this author
Roger W. Gilliatt MD, FRCP

Roger W. Gilliatt MD, FRCP

Electromyography Laboratory, Office of the Clinical Director, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

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Robin A. Conwit MD

Robin A. Conwit MD

Electromyography Laboratory, Office of the Clinical Director, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland

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First published: January 1995
Citations: 6

Abstract

Uncertainty about motor and sensory contributions in abnormal nerves has limited the use of mixed nerve action potentials (MNAPs). We recorded MNAPs in 21 patients with an acquired demyelinating neuropathy, 18 age-matched control subjects, and 10 patients with an axonal polyneuropathy. Bipolar and unipolar recordings from median and ulnar nerves were made above the elbow after electrical stimulation of the nerves at the wrist. Antidromic digital sensory action potentials and motor conduction velocity were also recorded for both nerves. In 19 median and 12 ulnar nerves from demyelinating polyneuropathy patients, compared with control subjects, MNAP amplitudes were significantly reduced (mean, 6 μV vs. 31 μV), MNAP velocities were mildly reduced (mean, 50 m/s vs. 62 m/s), motor conduction velocities were significantly reduced (mean, 33 m/s vs. 57 m/s), and MNAPs were significantly dispersed, with markedly prolonged rise times (mean, 2.0 ms vs. 1.0 ms). Compared with the axonal polyneuropathy group, MNAP amplitudes from the median nerve were similarly reduced (mean, 8 μV vs. 9 μV), MNAP velocities were only slightly slower (mean, 52 m/s vs. 58 m/s), but the rise times were significantly prolonged (mean, 2.0 ms vs. 1.2 ms). We conclude that, in acquired demyelinating neuropathies, the onset and, in some cases, the whole MNAP is from afferent fibers, which can be abnormally dispersed, and that, over the same segment, MNAP velocity is less affected than motor conduction velocity. 1995.© 1995 John Wiley &Sons, Inc.

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