Literature DB >> 16901913

Nerve excitability changes in critical illness polyneuropathy.

W J Z'Graggen1, C S Y Lin, R S Howard, R J Beale, H Bostock.   

Abstract

Patients in intensive care units frequently suffer muscle weakness and atrophy due to critical illness polyneuropathy (CIP), an axonal neuropathy associated with systemic inflammatory response syndrome and multiple organ failure. CIP is a frequent and serious complication of intensive care that delays weaning from mechanical ventilation and increases mortality. The pathogenesis of CIP is not well understood and no specific therapy is available. The aim of this project was to use nerve excitability testing to investigate the changes in axonal membrane properties occurring in CIP. Ten patients (aged 37-76 years; 7 males, 3 females) were studied with electrophysiologically proven CIP. The median nerve was stimulated at the wrist and compound action potentials were recorded from abductor pollicis brevis muscle. Strength-duration time constant, threshold electrotonus, current-threshold relationship and recovery cycle (refractoriness, superexcitability and late subexcitability) were recorded using a recently described protocol. In eight patients a follow-up investigation was performed. All patients underwent clinical examination and laboratory investigations. Compared with age-matched normal controls (20 subjects; aged 38-79 years; 7 males, 13 females), CIP patients exhibited reduced superexcitability at 7 ms, from -22.3 +/- 1.6% to -7.6 +/- 3.1% (mean +/- SE, P approximately 0.0001) and increased accommodation to depolarizing (P < 0.01) and hyperpolarizing currents (P < 0.01), indicating membrane depolarization. Superexcitability was reduced both in patients with renal failure and without renal failure. In the former, superexcitability correlated with serum potassium (R = 0.88), and late subexcitability was also reduced (as also occurs owing to hyperkalaemia in patients with chronic renal failure). In patients without renal failure, late subexcitability was normal, and the signs of membrane depolarization correlated with raised serum bicarbonate and base excess, indicating compensated respiratory acidosis. It is inferred that motor axons in these CIP patients are depolarized, in part because of raised extracellular potassium, and in part because of hypoperfusion. The chronic membrane depolarization may contribute to the development of neuropathy.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16901913     DOI: 10.1093/brain/awl191

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  27 in total

Review 1.  [Intensive care unit-acquired weakness in the critically ill : critical illness polyneuropathy and critical illness myopathy].

Authors:  K Judemann; D Lunz; Y A Zausig; B M Graf; W Zink
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Review 2.  Critical illness polyneuropathy and myopathy in the intensive care unit.

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Review 3.  Reducing iatrogenic risks: ICU-acquired delirium and weakness--crossing the quality chasm.

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Review 4.  The Sick and the Weak: Neuropathies/Myopathies in the Critically Ill.

Authors:  O Friedrich; M B Reid; G Van den Berghe; I Vanhorebeek; G Hermans; M M Rich; L Larsson
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5.  Sensitivity to ischaemia of single sympathetic nerve fibres innervating the dorsum of the human foot.

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7.  Inactivation of sodium channels underlies reversible neuropathy during critical illness in rats.

Authors:  Kevin R Novak; Paul Nardelli; Tim C Cope; Gregory Filatov; Jonathan D Glass; Jaffar Khan; Mark M Rich
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8.  Reduced motor neuron excitability is an important contributor to weakness in a rat model of sepsis.

Authors:  Paul Nardelli; Jacob A Vincent; Randall Powers; Tim C Cope; Mark M Rich
Journal:  Exp Neurol       Date:  2016-04-24       Impact factor: 5.330

Review 9.  [Critical illness polyneuropathy and myopathy as neurological complications of sepsis].

Authors:  R Kollmar
Journal:  Nervenarzt       Date:  2016-03       Impact factor: 1.214

10.  Pathophysiology and management of critical illness polyneuropathy and myopathy.

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