Volume 14, Issue 3 pp. 177-183

Etiology of small-fiber neuropathy

Josef Bednarik

Corresponding Author

Josef Bednarik

Department of Neurology, University Hospital and Masaryk University, Brno

Josef Bednarik, Department of Neurology, University Hospital and Masaryk University, Jihlavská 20, Brno 625 00, Czech Republic. Tel: +420532232501; Fax: +420532232249; E-mail: [email protected]Search for more papers by this author
Eva Vlckova-Moravcova

Eva Vlckova-Moravcova

Department of Neurology, University Hospital and Masaryk University, Brno

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Sarka Bursova

Sarka Bursova

Department of Neurology, University Hospital and Masaryk University, Brno

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Jana Belobradkova

Jana Belobradkova

Department of Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology, Diabetologic Centre, University Hospital, Brno

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Ladislav Dusek

Ladislav Dusek

Institute of Biostatistics and Analyses, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic

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Claudia Sommer

Claudia Sommer

Department of Neurology, Julius-Maximilians University, Würzburg, Germany

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First published: 10 November 2009
Citations: 58

Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the etiology in a group of 84 patients with painful sensory neuropathy with predominant small-fiber dysfunction (54 men and 30 women, median: 58; range: 25–83 years) recruited from a population of the South Moravian region of the Czech Republic. Involvement of small nerve fibers was verified by abnormal thermal thresholds and/or reduced intraepidermal nerve fiber densities. Motor signs or symptoms or significant clinical signs of sensory large-fiber involvement were exclusionary; 33 patients, however, had sensory nerve conduction abnormalities. For comparison, the prevalence of risk factors was assessed in a group of 47 asymptomatic age- and sex-matched controls (30 men and 17 women, median: 59; range: 29–85 years). The multivariate regression model disclosed that diabetes mellitus (odds ratio [OR] = 4.08), chronic alcoholism (OR = 5.31), and serum cholesterol levels (OR = 4.51) were the only parameters independently associated with small-fiber involvement. No possible etiology was detected in 19 patients (22.6%). In conclusion, the spectrum of risk factors and proportion of idiopathic cases in geographically defined small-fiber polyneuropathy sample is similar to that referred in large-fiber polyneuropathy.

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