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Disorders of peripheral nerves

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Title: Disorders of peripheral nerves


1
Disorders of peripheral nerves
2
Symptoms and signs of disorders of nerves
  • Caused by changes in axons
  • Increased conduction time
  • Increased temporal dispersion
  • Expression of neural plasticity causing changes
    in the function of CNS structures

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Anatomy of peripheral nerves
6
Anatomy of peripheral nerves
  • Peripheral nerves have different conduction
    velocity

7
Conduction velocity in nerves and fiber tracts
  • Proportional to fiber diameter
  • Peripheral nerves 50 meter/sec
  • (5 cm/msec)
  • Spinal descending tracts 70-100 m/sec
  • Cranial nerves varies
  • (Auditory nerve 20 m/sec)

8
Nerve fibers with different diameter have
different conduction velocity
Fig 4.3
From Møller Sensory Systems, 2003
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From Møller Sensory Systems, 2003
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Many nerves are mixed nerves
  • Contains nerve fibers with different conduction
    velocity

13
Recording from a long nerve composed of fibers
with different diameter thus different conduction
velocity
14
Organization of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord
FROM BRODAL 1998
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Many nerves are bipolar nerves
  • Examples are dorsal roots

17
From Brodal 1998
18
Pathologies of peripheral nerves
  • Nerves
  • Neurapraxia
  • Axonotmesis
  • Neurotmesis
  • Nuclei
  • Altered discharge pattern (burst activity)

19
Causes of injury to peripheral nerves
  • Trauma
  • Compression (entrapment)
  • Irritation
  • Metabolic disorders
  • Inflammatory (neuritis)
  • Virus
  • Age related changes

20
Trauma to peripheral nerves
  • Interruption of nerve trunk (neurotmesis)
  • Interruption of axons (axonotmesis)
  • Total conduction failure (neurapraxia)
  • Impaired conduction (no morphologic change)

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Neurapraxia
23
Total conduction failure (neurapraxia)
  • No function
  • Recovers spontaneously over days or weeks (when
    the cause is resolved)
  • Results of spontaneous recovery are almost always
    good

24
Interruption of axons (axonotmesis)
  • No function
  • New axon grows from cell body (spontaneously)

25
Axonotmesis
  • Nerve may regenerate from injured location away
    from the cell body
  • Regeneration 1 mm per day (approx. 1 inch per
    month)
  • Results of spontaneous recovery are good to
    moderate depending on distance

26
Interruption of nerve trunk (neurotmesis)
  • No function
  • Irreversible, grafting is required

27
Neurotmesis
  • Does not regenerate spontaneously
  • Grafting is necessary to restore function
  • Results of grating are good to moderate to
    failures

28
Injured nerves
Axon interrupted (Wallerian degeneration) Interr
uption of axon and endoneurial sheet Interruptio
n of perineurial sheet Interruption of nerve
trunk
29
Axonotmesis
Type 2
Neurotmesis
Type 3
Type 4
Type 5
30
Interrupted axons
  • Degenerate distally (away from cell body)
  • Wallerian degeneration
  • Interrupted axons regenerate from injury,
    provided that endoneural tube is intact

31
Wallerian degeneration means
  • The degenerative changes the distal segment of a
    peripheral nerve fiber (axon and myelin)
    undergoes when its continuity with its cell body
    is interrupted by a focal lesion.
  • Syn orthograde degeneration, secondary
    degeneration.

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START 9/7/05
34
Remaining symptoms after nerve healing of injury
  • Synkinesis
  • Hyperactivity
  • (Mostly caused by effect on central nervous
    system structures)

35
Electrophysiological manifestations of
pathologies of peripheral nerves
  • Nerves
  • Increased conduction times
  • Increased or decreased discharge activity
  • Dispersion of neural activity
  • Altered discharge pattern (burst activity)

36
Cause of neural pathologies
  • Mechanical (compression, stretching)
  • Heat
  • Metabolic
  • Inflammation
  • Iatrogenic (from medical treatment)
  • Idiopathic (unknown)
  • Age

37
Trauma
  • Gunshot to limbs
  • Accidents
  • Surgery (iatrogenic)

38
Sprouting
  • Caused by injury
  • Caused by regeneration

39
Formation of neuroma
  • Sprouting of axons at cut of a nerve
  • Injured perineurium

40
Neuroma are mechanically sensitive
41
Compression
  • No known cause
  • Scar tissue
  • Changes in bone formation

42
Block of axoplasmatic flow
43
Irritation
  • Scar tissue
  • Blood vessels

44
Metabolic and chemical induced peripheral
neuropathy
  • Diabetes
  • Uremic, hepatic and vitamin (B1,B2,B12) deficits
  • Alcohol
  • Chemical

45
Inflammatory (neuritis)
  • Guillain-Barre syndrome

46
Virus
  • Herpes simplex (causes severe pain)

47
Demyelination
  • Ephaptic transmission
  • Reflection of neural activity
  • Mechanosensitivity

48
Injury to a peripheral nerve can cause
transneural degeneration of the target cell
49
Functional implications of neural injuries
  • Change the function of the target central
    neurons
  • May cause expression of neural plasticity

50
Abnormal activity in a peripheral nerve can cause
changes in the function of the target cells
51
Cause of synkinesis and hyperactivity
  • Plastic changes in target neurons induced by the
    injury

52
Expression of neural plasticity from injury to
sensory nerves
  • Deprivation of input
  • Overstimulation

53
Impaired conduction
  • Decreased conduction velocity
  • Increased refractory period
  • Ectopic (out of place) activity

54
Irritation of peripheral nerves
  • Cause change in central processing
  • Pain
  • Hypersensitivity
  • Spasm

55
Irritation of nerve roots
  • Cause change in central processing
  • Transition between peripheral and central myelin
    is especially sensitive

56
Irritation of nerve roots
  • Pain
  • Hyperalgesia
  • Spasm
  • (Expression of neural plasticity)

57
Start 9/12/05
58
Signs of peripheral nerve disorders
  • Motor nerves
  • Paralysis
  • Spasm
  • Electrophysiologic changes

59
Explanation
  • A sign is any abnormality indicative of disease,
    discoverable on examination of the patient.

60
Symptoms of peripheral nerve disorders
  • Sensory nerves
  • Numbness
  • Tingling
  • Pain

61

Explanation
  • A symptom is any morbid phenomenon or departure
    from the normal in structure, function, or
    sensation, experienced by the patient and
    indicative of disease.

62
Slightly injured nerves (demyelination)
  • Decreased conduction velocity
  • Abnormal firing pattern
  • Peripheral nerves as impulse generators
  • Possible ephaptic) transmission
  • ) Direct transfer of impulse activity from one
    nerve fiber to another

63
Decreased conduction velocity
  • Temporal dispersion of neural activity
  • Change in neural coding of sensory stimuli

64
Decreased conduction velocity
  • The decrease is not the same for all fibers
  • Temporal dispersion of neural activity

65
Increased spatial dispersion
  • Can decrease excitation
  • Can increase excitation
  • Can degrade temporal information

66
From Møller 2005
67
Temporal dispersion
  • 1. Can decrease the activation of the target
    neuron
  • Can increase the duration of firing of the target
    neuron, which can increase or decrease activation
    of the following neuron.
  • Increased temporal dispersion may prevent
    activation of the next neuron in a chain, or it
    may make it possible to activate neurons that are
    not normally activated.
  • 4. Increased temporal dispersion may degrade
    information when temporal coding is important
    such as in sensory systems, most pronounced in
    hearing

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Abnormal firing pattern
  • Burst firing

70
From Møller 2005
71
Peripheral nerves as impulse generators
  • Ectopic activity
  • After demyelination
  • Diabetic neuropathy
  • Adrenergic substances facilitate impulse
    generation

72
Ectopic firing
  • Burst
  • Rhythmic
  • After-discharges to stimulation
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