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Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry logoLink to Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry
. 1985 Apr;48(4):361–366. doi: 10.1136/jnnp.48.4.361

An improved automated method for the measurement of thermal thresholds. 2. Patients with peripheral neuropathy.

G A Jamal, A I Weir, S Hansen, J P Ballantyne
PMCID: PMC1028303  PMID: 2987419

Abstract

Thermal thresholds were determined by a new technique, at wrists and ankles in 143 patients with peripheral neuropathies of diverse aetiologies. Ninety-nine percent of patients (141/143) had abnormalities of one or both thresholds. In only two patients with mild/early Friedreich's ataxia were thermal thresholds normal. Electromyography was performed and fastest motor nerve conduction velocities and sensory nerve action potential parameters were measured in all the patients using conventional techniques in ulnar, median and sural nerves. Eighty-nine percent of patients (127/143) had one or more abnormalities on these electrophysiological studies. However, 39 of 40 patients with completely normal sensory nerve studies had an abnormality of one or more thermal thresholds. Eighty-six percent of 48 patients with normal sural nerve studies had abnormal thermal thresholds at the ankle. Sixty percent of 70 patients with normal sensory median and ulnar nerve studies had abnormal wrist thermal thresholds. This improved technique for the determination of thermal thresholds reveals that disturbances of thermal sensibility are present in the majority of peripheral neuropathies irrespective of aetiology. In some patients disturbances of thermal thresholds antedate the appearance of abnormalities on conventional electrophysiological investigation. The findings suggest that this technique has considerable usefulness in the detection of small nerve fibre dysfunction in the context of generalised neuropathy.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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