Litcius/Paper detail

Diseases which cause generalized peripheral neuropathy: a systematic review

Bodil Roth, Danielle Bernadette Schiro, Bodil Ohlsson

2021Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology13 citationsDOI

Abstract

PURPOSE: Peripheral autonomic neuropathy, including enteric neuropathy, may be subtle and unrecognized for several years. Diagnosis of enteric neuropathy demands complicated examinations such as full-thickness bowel biopsy. We hypothesized that knowledge about simultaneous occurrence of different types of neuropathy would lead to faster recognition and diagnosis of autonomic/enteric neuropathy. The aim of the present systematic review was to increase the awareness of disease groups causing autonomic and enteric neuropathy along with sensorimotor neuropathy. METHODS: A systematic search strategy was used in PubMed, Embase and Web of Science. First, 4978 articles were identified. Review of titles/abstracts rendered exclusion of animal studies, articles not written in English or full-length, case reports, conference abstracts and duplicates until 357 articles remained. The full-length evaluation resulted in 35 studies (27 non-systematic reviews) which described objectively verified peripheral autonomic, enteric and sensorimotor neuropathy within the same disease. RESULTS: , as well as the autoimmune response to the infection, i.e., Guillain-Barré syndrome, may lead to widespread peripheral neuropathy. Hereditary disorders with disturbed metabolism lead to intermittent attacks of neuropathy. CONCLUSIONS: The major causes of generalized peripheral neuropathy are diabetes, diseases with tissue deposits, autoimmunity, infections, malignancy and metabolic diseases.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePeripheral neuropathyMalignancyOptic neuropathyDiabetes mellitusDermatologyDiseaseDiabetic neuropathyPathologyInternal medicineOptic nerveOphthalmologyEndocrinologyPeripheral Neuropathies and DisordersAutoimmune Neurological Disorders and TreatmentsGastrointestinal motility and disorders