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Alcohol-related peripheral neuropathy: Nutritional, toxic, or both?

✍ Scribed by Michelle Mellion; James M. Gilchrist; Suzanne De La Monte


Book ID
102535107
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
161 KB
Volume
43
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-639X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Alcohol‐related peripheral neuropathy (ALN) is a potentially debilitating complication of alcoholism that results in sensory, motor, and autonomic dysfunction. Unfortunately, ALN is rarely discussed as a specific disease entity in textbooks because it is widely assumed to primarily reflect consequences of nutritional deficiency. This hypothesis is largely based on observations first made over eight decades ago when it was demonstrated that thiamine deficiency (beriberi) neuropathy was clinically similar to ALN. In recent studies, failure of thiamine treatment to reverse ALN, together with new information demonstrating clinical and electrophysiological distinctions between ALN and nutritional deficiency neuropathies, suggests that alcohol itself may significantly predispose and enhance development of neuropathy in the appropriate clinical setting. We reviewed the evidence on both sides and conclude that ALN should be regarded as a toxic rather than nutritional neuropathy. Muscle Nerve 43: 309–316, 2011


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