Suggest Treatment For Mitochondrial Disorder And Worsened Symptoms Of Peripheral Neuropathy
Please upload NCS-EMG images/examination records.
Detailed Answer:
Hi XXXX,
Thanks for being on healthcaremagic.com.
I am Dr.Ajay Panwar,a neurologist,here to answer your query.
If you would have presented to as an outpatient with this much complaint,I would have told you that-your friend is currently on 'Gabapentin' and 'duloxetine' which are excellent anti-neuralgic medicines.Still,if he is worsening,then knowing what is the cause for his peripheral neuropathy is crucial to treat him.It even,does not appear to be peripheral neuropathy,rather proximal neuropathy or neuronopathy ,because upper limbs worse than lower limbs are against peripheral neuropathy.
Please answer a few questions so that I can answer your query better-
1)What is the duration of illness(months or years)?
2)Did it start in upper limbs or lower limbs?
3)Is he having weakness in hands and loss of sensations,any one or both of them?(Describe the symptoms in detail)
4)Any significant medicines history?Is he diabetic or any other past medical history?
5)Any history of rash,fever or joint pains?
Please provide answers to these questions and upload the scanned image of Nerve conduction studies and EMG reports as well as images of the documents ,on which the neurologist has recorded his history and physical examination details of the patient.
Waiting for your follow up question.
Dr.Ajay Panwar,
MD,DM(Neurology)
Neurological: bipolar, epilepsy, neuropathy
Genitourinary: dribbles urine at times secondary to litium.
I feel like he needs the Mri to definatively rule out ms, assess for possible als or spinal causes. He started having the pain on the right side arm and leg it then became bilateral with pain worse in upper extremities. He says his hands are weak sometimes but attributes this to the pain being worse those days. His hands have been numb at times and he complains of constant pins and needles. No diabetes, fever, or joint pains. He has had a significant rash in his under arms and groin 3 times as an adult typically in sunmer months following working outside. Appeared to be chaffing but was very painful and did not clear quickly. Use of antifungal creams provided no relief but use of cream for yeast did.
It does not appear like MS. MRI spine/NCS are mandatory.
Detailed Answer:
Hi XXXX,
Thanks for being in follow-up and providing extremely detailed medical history.
I have gone through the clinical history and drug history in details. Based on that, my sincere suggestions and interpretation are:
1)Disease is progressive in nature,so unlikely to be classical MS,unless we are talking about primary progressive MS. However, it is mandatory to do MRI spine here to rule out any degenerative spine changes thus causing nerve roots compression(radiculopathy) and thus the resulting symptoms.
2)You said that copies of EMG are not available, but I again request you to procure them somehow or get it repeated.This is so because without Nerve conduction studies(NCS) and EMG traces and reports,a second opinion on this is essentially incomplete.There is nothing like EMG positive. EMG positive means it can be either myopathic(muscle disease) or neuropathic(nerve disease,nerve root disease,anterior horn disease). But yes,one thing is clear,EMG positive indicates that MS is not the likely diagnosis. For ALS,again EMG traces and reports are mandatory.
So, I sincerely request you to procure NCS and EMG somehow and get in touch. I will be glad to advise you well.
Hope I have answered your query for now.If you have some follow up questions,I shall be glad to answer else,please close the thread-rate it and write a review.
Dr.Ajay Panwar,
MD,DM(Neurology)
That's nice.
Detailed Answer:
Hi XXXX,
Thanks for being in follow-up.
That's really nice.
Will wait for you to get back with the reports.
Dr.Ajay Panwar,
MD,DM(Neurology)