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This study investigated the frequency and types of peripheral neuropathy in the lower limbs of patients undergoing rehabilitation after traumatic spinal cord injury or spinal cord disease. This study included consecutive patients with spinal cord injury/spinal cord disease who had electrophysiological assessments during their admission in a rehabilitation center from October 2015 to July 2019. Patients with traumatic spinal cord injury were compared with patients with nontraumatic spinal cord disease. There were 67 patients (52 male patients, 15 female patients; mean age = 56.5 yrs) of whom 36 patients had spinal cord injury and 31 patients had spinal cord disease. Most of the patients were middle-aged men with at least one preexisting medical comorbidity, who were mostly admitted for rehabilitation of cervical, incomplete spinal cord injury/spinal cord disease. Most patients (86.6%) had abnormal electrophysiological studies representing 5.57% of all admissions. A length-dependent polyneuropathy was diagnosed in 0.77% of all admissions (n = 8). The group of patients with spinal cord injury was comparable with the group of patients with spinal cord disease regarding the other baseline data, clinical, and electrophysiological findings. Diseases of the peripheral nervous system were similarly found among patients undergoing rehabilitation for either spinal cord injury or spinal cord disease. A length-dependent polyneuropathy was diagnosed in 0.77% of all admissions. Timely diagnosis and proper treatment of the cause of peripheral neuropathies in the lower limbs in these patients may potentially influence rehabilitation protocols and improve patient outcomes. Copyright © 2020 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

Citation

Jason Liang, Julio C Furlan. Peripheral Neuropathy in the Lower Limbs of Individuals With Spinal Cord Injury or Disease: A Retrospective Study. American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation. 2021 Jan 01;100(1):57-64

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PMID: 32618751

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