TY - JOUR
T1 - Selective Calf Weakness Suggests Intraspinal Pathology, Not Peripheral Neuropathy
AU - Bourque, Pierre R.
AU - Dyck, Peter James
PY - 1990/1
Y1 - 1990/1
N2 - Four patients, referred as having peripheral neuropathy, were noted to be able to walk on their heels but not on their toes. In each, intraspinal disease was found: ependymoma of the filum terminale, spinal muscular atrophy, spinal stenosis, and meningeal carcinomatosis. By comparison, in 86 cases of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type 1, ankle plantar flexors were never weaker than ankle dorsiflexors. Patients with greater weakness in plantar flexors than in dorsiflexors should be suspected of having intraspinal disease rather than peripheral neuropathy. Physiologic and biomechanical factors may explain why muscles innervated by the peroneal nerve are weaker, or graded weaker, in peripheral neuropathy.
AB - Four patients, referred as having peripheral neuropathy, were noted to be able to walk on their heels but not on their toes. In each, intraspinal disease was found: ependymoma of the filum terminale, spinal muscular atrophy, spinal stenosis, and meningeal carcinomatosis. By comparison, in 86 cases of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type 1, ankle plantar flexors were never weaker than ankle dorsiflexors. Patients with greater weakness in plantar flexors than in dorsiflexors should be suspected of having intraspinal disease rather than peripheral neuropathy. Physiologic and biomechanical factors may explain why muscles innervated by the peroneal nerve are weaker, or graded weaker, in peripheral neuropathy.
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U2 - 10.1001/archneur.1990.00530010097026
DO - 10.1001/archneur.1990.00530010097026
M3 - Article
C2 - 2153022
AN - SCOPUS:0025166662
SN - 0003-9942
VL - 47
SP - 79
EP - 80
JO - Archives of Neurology
JF - Archives of Neurology
IS - 1
ER -