Chapter 18: Neurology
Chapter 18: Neurology
Chapter 18: Neurology
T-Toxic
H-Hereditary
R-Recurrent
A-Amyloidosis
P-Porphyria
I-Infectious
S-Systemic
T-Tumor
NOTE* Pes cavus is the major foot type associated with neurologic illness.
Patients with pes cavus can be divided into four groups:
1. Patients with hereditofamilial disease: Friedreich's ataxia and Charcot-
MarieTooth disease.
2. Those who have isolated pes cavus but whose family members have one
of the aforementioned hereditofamilial neurologic diseases.
3. Those with isolated, or idiopathic, familial pes cavus with no family history
of hereditofamilial neurologic disease.
4. Those with familial pes cavus and lymphedema (very rare syndrome).
NOTE* The Brown Sequard syndrome occurs after hemisection of the spinal
cord, which results in an ipsilateral spastic paralysis and loss of postural
sense, and on the opposite side a loss of pain and temperature sensations
Vasomotor disturbance
Vasodilation: warm skin, dry skin, and hypohidrosis
Vasoconstriction: cyanosis, cool skin, edema of the part, and hyperhidrosis
NOTE* The striking feature is that while all signs and symptoms are usually
resent, a patient often manifests one out of proportion to all the others.
i. There are three grades based upon mode of onset, Intensity, and
preponderance of symptoms
Grade 1 (SEVERE): rapid onset, severe burning/knifelike pain, severe
vasomotor disturbance, no mobility, atrophy early.
Grade 2 (MODERATE): slow onset, dull/throbbing diffuse pain,
aggravated by walking (and relieved with rest and immobilization),
edema, atrophy, and osteoporosis.
Grade 3 (MILD): most common type, the border zone between normal
response and exaggerated response so is often overlooked, usually seen
after surgical procedures
ii. There are three stages of the disease divided as per the time frame -
Stage 1 (days to weeks): Characterized by
Pain
Hyperesthesia
Hyperalgesia
Localized edema
Muscle spasm and tenderness
Vasomotor disease
No x-ray changes
Trophic changes of hair, nails and skin begin
In mild cases (GRADE 3) this stage lasts a few weeks and then subsides
spontaneously
In severe cases (GRADE 1) symptoms become progressively worse
NOTE* The goal is to restore functional and anatomical integrity ASAP and
break the sympathetic response.
5. Diagnosis: Not always easy, as the signs are not always definitive a.
History of paresthesias
b. History of trauma
c. History of systemic disease
d. Hoffman-Tinel's sign: A tingling in region of the distribution of the involved
nerve with light percussion, results in paresthesias distal to the site of
percussion.
e. Valleix Phenomena: A nerve trunk tenderness above and below the point
of compression, with paresthesias proximal and distal to the point of
percussion.
f. Turk's test: Application of a venous tourniquet to the lower extremity will
elicit positive symptoms on the affected side, by producing a venous
occlusion.
g. Forced eversion of the foot.
h. Positive radiographic evidence of previous injury
i. Positive lab studies for any specific disease
j. EMG's and nerve conduction studies are only useful for late stage disease.
6. Treatment: Conservative
a. Local blocks: Posterior tibial nerve blocks with steroids
b. Unna boot: can be combined with nerve blocks
c. Support hose: for varicosities
d. Functional orthoses
8. Complications:
a. Recurrence: due to fibrosis
b. Severing the PT artery : if done then tie off and prepare patient for
microvascular repair later.
c. Severing a nerve
d. Tenosynovitis
e. Hematoma
f. Wound dehiscence
3. Neuroma (Morton's):
a. Definition: A neuroma represents hyperplasia of Schwann cells, axonal
elements and fibroblasts in an area where proximal elements cannot relocate
to their distal pathways
b. Histopathology: The term neuroma refers only to nodules that are formed
by hyperplasia of axons and Schwann cells. This process is characterized by
endoneural and neural edema (early stages); perineural, epineural, and
endoneural fibrosis (late stages); and eventually demyelination. It is a
reactive lesion, not a tumor. The term 'Morton's Neuroma' refers to a lesion in
the third intermetatarsal space only.
The above diagrams A,B, and C show the technique of partial neurorrhaphy.
Diagram D shows the exposed nerve with orientation sutures, the ends
mobilized, bulbous distal segments removed (E) and epineural sutures
inserted circumfrentially (G,H,I) to repair the nerve