TY - JOUR KW - Disability KW - leprosy KW - Nerve conduction KW - Nerve thickening KW - Neuropathy KW - outcome AU - Chaudhary S AU - Kalita J AU - Misra U AB -
Background and Objective: To report the role of nerve conduction study (NCS) in diagnosis, monitoring, and prognosis of Hansen's disease (HD).
Materials and Methods: In a hospital-based prospecive observational study, the patients with HD as per World Health Organization (WHO) criteria were included; muscle wasting power, reflexes, and sensations were recorded. Motor NCS of median, ulnar, and peroneal nerves and sensory NCS of ulnar, median, and sural nerves were recorded. Disability was graded using WHO grading scale. The outcome was assessed after 6 months using modified Rankin scale.
Results: In the present study, 38 patients with a median age of 40 (15-80) years and five females were included. The diagnosis was tuberculoid in seven, borderline tuberculoid in 23, borderline lepromatous in two, and borderline in six patients. The disability was grade 1 and 2 in 19 patients each. Out of 480 nerves studied, NCS was normal in 139 sensory (57.4%) and 160 (67.2%) motor nerves. NCSs were axonal in seven sensory and eight motor nerves, demyelinating in three nerves, and mixed in one in seven patients who had lepra reaction. NCS findings did not correlate with disability (p = 1.0) or outcome (0.304) and provided additional information in 11 nerves (seven patients). Peripheral nerves were enlarged in 79. NCSs were normal in 32 (29.90%) in thickened nerves.
Conclusion: In HD, NCS abnormalities correlated with respective sensory or motor abnormality but related with neither disability nor the outcome.
BT - Neurology India C1 -https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37322740
DA - 01/2023 DO - 10.4103/0028-3886.378653 IS - 3 J2 - Neurol India LA - eng N2 -Background and Objective: To report the role of nerve conduction study (NCS) in diagnosis, monitoring, and prognosis of Hansen's disease (HD).
Materials and Methods: In a hospital-based prospecive observational study, the patients with HD as per World Health Organization (WHO) criteria were included; muscle wasting power, reflexes, and sensations were recorded. Motor NCS of median, ulnar, and peroneal nerves and sensory NCS of ulnar, median, and sural nerves were recorded. Disability was graded using WHO grading scale. The outcome was assessed after 6 months using modified Rankin scale.
Results: In the present study, 38 patients with a median age of 40 (15-80) years and five females were included. The diagnosis was tuberculoid in seven, borderline tuberculoid in 23, borderline lepromatous in two, and borderline in six patients. The disability was grade 1 and 2 in 19 patients each. Out of 480 nerves studied, NCS was normal in 139 sensory (57.4%) and 160 (67.2%) motor nerves. NCSs were axonal in seven sensory and eight motor nerves, demyelinating in three nerves, and mixed in one in seven patients who had lepra reaction. NCS findings did not correlate with disability (p = 1.0) or outcome (0.304) and provided additional information in 11 nerves (seven patients). Peripheral nerves were enlarged in 79. NCSs were normal in 32 (29.90%) in thickened nerves.
Conclusion: In HD, NCS abnormalities correlated with respective sensory or motor abnormality but related with neither disability nor the outcome.
PY - 2023 SP - 458 EP - 462 T2 - Neurology India TI - Role of Nerve Conduction Studies in Hansen's Disease. VL - 71 SN - 1998-4022 ER -