Showing posts with label That. Show all posts
Showing posts with label That. Show all posts

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Watch Out For Medications That Actually Cause Neuropathy Themselves!


Today's post from medmerits.com (see link below) is highly technical and mentions many drugs you may never have heard of but is nevertheless a very useful article. If only more experts in the field exposed dangerous drugs in this way, many people might be spared the agonies of neuropathy. However, that is easier said than done and when you think of the complexity of the drugs we use for all other conditions, it's maybe little wonder that, despite their effectiveness in treating the main target problem, one of their side effects can be nerve damage. That said, it's the job of pharmaceutical companies and doctors to protect us (or at least warn us) from hidden side effects but sometimes, the achievement of success in treating one problem can be enough to forgive the emergence of another. Take chemotherapy as one glaring example: without it the cancer may not be tackled but with it comes a significant risk of neuropathy - sometimes it's a question of which is the greater evil/benefit. In war they call it 'collateral damage'. What this detailed article does tell us is that it's always important to check and know the chemical name of the drugs we are taking, because the brand names often hide a multitude of sins, If you use various trustworthy drug interaction check sites, you will need to know the drug's proper name in order to be able to check all its potential interactions and side effects. Unfortunately, most people with neuropathy also have other medical issues and are being treated for those as well, so it's vital to be able to trust any drug combinations and at least be forewarned of any possible problems.

Drug-induced neuropathies
By Louis H Weimer MD Etiology Article section 4 of 11. 

No broad etiology or pathogenic mechanism has been suggested, but isolated cases may be part of an acute hypersensitivity reaction (Glyn and Crofts 1966). Most of the potentially pathogenic mechanisms in this section are speculative.

Specific agents.

Allopurinol. Allopurinol has been used for the treatment of gout since its approval in 1966. Allopurinol inhibits the enzyme xanthine oxidase, which blocks the metabolism of hypoxanthine and xanthine (oxypurines) to uric acid, interfering with the catabolism of purines. A number of cases of neuropathy have been associated with this agent in reports with various strengths of association (Glyn and Crofts 1966; Worth and Hussein 1985; Azulay et al 1993). The initial description included a hypersensitivity reaction with later drug rechallenge with a subsequent repeat allergic reaction, which included symptoms and signs of peripheral neuropathy. The patient also received colchicine after symptom onset with unclear timing related to neuropathy onset. Symptoms improved but persisted after cessation (Glyn and Crofts 1966). Fewer than 10 cases have been noted in the literature with at least 2 cases having complicating issues (uremia). The most recent report included some electrophysiologically and pathologically demyelinating features (Azulay et al 1993). These features were not previously noted, and regression occurred after drug cessation. Most cases occur after several or many years of therapy. No predisposition or ancillary factors are currently known. No experimental evidence supports the association, making this a possible, but not a definite, rare idiosyncratic association. In fact, the agent has been used to preserve nerve and vascular function in streptozotocin-induced diabetic neuropathy in rats (Inkster et al 2007). Inhibition of xanthine oxidase produced reactive oxygen species is the suspected beneficial effect. Blood flow declines caused by the experimental diabetes were also partially corrected.

Almitrine. Almitrine bismesylate is not FDA approved for use in the United States, but it is available in many other countries for treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and some vascular disorders including stroke prophylaxis. Almitrine acts as a peripheral chemoreceptor agonist. The component is noteworthy because it appears to commonly induce a predominantly sensory neuropathy. In 1 small placebo controlled study of 7 controls and 5 treated chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients, 3 of 5 treated patients and none of the controls developed significant neuropathy (Allen and Prowse 1989). Bouche and colleagues reported 46 cases of almitrine-associated neuropathy in one series (Bouche et al 1989). The range of onset described is 9 to 25 months after medication onset. Sensory symptoms restricted to distal legs involving all modalities are typical. Electrophysiology and nerve biopsy findings were consistent with sensory axonopathy (Gherardi and Baudrimont 1987; Petit et al 1987). Improvement is described in most cases and is usually complete after a year (Bouche et al 1989). Numerous other reports have been made that support the high incidence of neurotoxicity with this agent (Louarn 1985; Blondel et al 1986; Petit et al 1987; Allen 1988; Wouters et al 1988; Allen and Prowse 1989; Gherardi et al 1989). Small placebo control studies have reported variable, but significant, percentages of patients stopping trials because of neuropathic symptoms. Gherardi and colleagues have reported nerve biopsy and ultrastructural studies of 8 cases. The primary finding is axonal loss of large myelinated fibers with signs of regeneration in 1 delayed biopsy. In addition, signs including segmental demyelination on teased fiber preparations suggested a demyelinating component in a variable percentage of fibers. No animal studies are available for consideration. No predisposing conditions are known. Moreover, the severity of hypoxemia from the pulmonary disease does not appear to correlate with the appearance of neuropathy or subsequent improvement after cessation. One series did describe a shorter latency to neuropathy onset in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease versus vascular patients, but most were receiving higher doses. However, some additional neuropathological signs seen in isolated cases (microangiopathy) could be secondary to chronic hypoxemia. Weight loss is commonly associated with the appearance of neuropathy. Some studies using a lower dosage (< 100 mg/day) have shown no significant neuropathy, including electrophysiologic changes (Weitzenblum et al 1992). Recent series have reported no dropout due to neuropathy of patients who used similar dosages, but these series are without specific methods to detect sensory loss.

Amitriptyline. Amitriptyline is a useful drug in the treatment of painful conditions including peripheral neuropathy, especially conditions with marked small fiber mediated pain involvement. However, several reports have associated this agent and, even more rarely, other tricyclic antidepressants including imipramine with inducing peripheral neuropathy (LeWitt and Forno 1985; Leys et al 1987). Many of the cases described are in the setting of overdose with other complications including rhabdomyolysis and cholinergic effects on the CNS and periphery; however, a small number have described suspected neuropathy on conventional amitriptyline dosages with improvement after cessation (Isaacs and Carlish 1963; Nimmo Smith and Grieve 1963; Zampollo et al 1988). There is limited experimental evidence of ultrastructural lesions in cultured neurons and astrocytes, but this relation to human toxicity is speculative at best and has not altered use in patients with neuropathy.

Chloroquine. Chloroquine is an agent used to treat malaria prophylaxis and some autoimmune conditions. The primary neuromuscular complication is a vacuolar myopathy, which can be fulminant (Siddiqui 2007); however, rare cases of neuropathy with demyelinating features and axonal loss have been described (Wasay et al 1998; Stein et al 2000). Onset is typically 1 to 2 years after starting medication and involves both sensory and motor fibers. Severity is not typically marked. Schwann cells have shown dense and laminar cytoplasmic inclusions similar to those seen with amiodarone and perhexiline, notable other causes of demyelinating toxic neuropathy. Sural biopsies have shown axonal loss and segmental demyelination and remyelination (Tegner et al 1988). Electrodiagnostic studies have also suggested a neurogenic component superimposed on the predominant myopathy. Some have noted the pattern could mimic a polyradiculopathy. This effect has been reproduced in rats.

Cyclosporin. Cyclosporin A has been used as an immunosuppressive agent in numerous conditions including organ transplantation and even some cases of immune mediated neuropathy. Limited information has associated cyclosporin A with otherwise unexplained peripheral neuropathy. The evidence rates this agent at best as a possible, but not probable, causative agent at present (Blin et al 1989; Chan et al 1996).

Dichloroacetate.
Dichloroacetate is used experimentally to treat chronic lactic acidemia from mitochondrial diseases. Peripheral neuropathy is common with chronic dichloroacetate treatment. Clinical and electrophysiologic signs of sensorimotor neuropathy are found (Spruijt et al 2001; Anselm and Darras 2006; Kaufmann et al 2006). The neuropathy is significant but can be reversible over months if the drug is stopped. Neuropathy also develops in younger children with lactic acidosis but was said to be tolerated by most in one trial of 36 impaired children (Stacpoole et al 2008). The neurotoxic mechanism is not fully known, but the agent causes reversible demyelination in cultured rat Schwann cells and dorsal root ganglia neurons exposed to dichloroacetate for up to 12 days (Felitsyn et al 2007). The heme precursor delta-aminolevulinate is implicated in neurologic complications associated with porphyria and tyrosinemia type I. The compound is elevated in the urine of animals and humans on dichloroacetate and appears to damage Schwann cells in part by reducing the levels of myelin-associated lipids and proteins, including myelin protein zero and peripheral myelin protein 22 (Felitsyn et al 2008). It is currently unclear but suspected that patients with mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) may be at increased risk of developing the toxic neuropathy. The drug is also under investigation in the treatment of glioblastoma multiforme. Dichloroacetate may help minimize treatment resistance mediated by changes in mitochondria that reduce cancer cell apoptosis in part by a switch from mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation to cytoplasmic glycolysis. However, studies in humans have been limited by dose-dependent peripheral neuropathy (Michelakis et al 2010).

Glutethimide. Glutethimide is a sedative-hypnotic agent originally used as an ethanol substitute, but it proved to be highly addictive in its own right. The compound was reclassified as schedule II and withdrawn from general availability in 1991. Chemically, the compound is structurally similar to thalidomide, an agent that more commonly induces sensory neuropathy. Rarely, neuropathy has been associated with chronic glutethimide use at high doses (Nover 1967; Haas and Marasigan 1968). Cerebellar ataxia is also described and may be marked and persistent. Manifestations are predominantly but not exclusively sensory and are supported by limited electrodiagnostic data. Improvement or resolution over ensuing months is described. No experimental evidence or nerve biopsy data are available for correlation.

Ixabepilone. The epothilones are a new class of chemotherapeutic agent with currently low tumor resistance. The class includes the natural agents, epothilone B (patupilone) and epothilone D, which are not yet FDA approved as well as the semisynthetic analog, ixabepilone (Bhushan and Walko 2008; Swain and Arezzo 2008); ixabepilone was FDA approved in October 2007. Breast cancer is the primary indication, but phase II studies are completed or are ongoing for a variety of cancer types. The group binds to tubulin similarly to certain other chemotherapeutic agents, such as vinca alkaloids and taxanes, but at differing binding sites. Similar to taxanes, the drugs promote dysfunctional stabilization of microtubules but with a differing mechanism, in contrast to microtubular destabilizing agents such as vincristine, colchicine, and podophyllotoxin (Cortes and Baselga 2007). Peripheral neuropathy from ixabepilone is a major dose-limiting side effect. Mild-to-moderate (grade 1 to 2), predominately sensory neuropathy that improves or resolves is most common, but more severe grades (grade 3) occur rarely in monotherapy and at rates of 10% to 15% with combination therapy or in patients previously exposed to taxanes or capecitabine; grade 4 neuropathy appears to be very rare (Denduluri et al 2007; Perez et al 2007; Roche et al 2007; Thomas et al 2007a). Dose reduction may be adequate in many, but treatment discontinuation occurs as well; more dispersed treatment protocols may have lesser toxicity (Thomas et al 2007b). Twenty-one percent of patients treated with ixabepilone plus capecitabine discontinued treatment because of sensory neuropathy in one large phase III trial (Thomas et al 2007b). Severity increases with cumulative dosing, especially after an average of 4 treatment cycles. The overall neuropathy incidence varies depending on dose and coincident treatments but is as high as 67%. The reported reversibility of sensory neuropathy is surprising considering the experience with other microtubule targeting agents such as vincristine and taxanes. One patient is reported who developed significant weakness associated with neuropathy after 1 treatment cycle (Bosch-Barrera et al 2009). Review of all phase 2 and phase 3 clinical trials found a 1% incidence of severe neuropathy in patients previously untreated and up to 24% of breast cancer patients treated with other agents (Vahdat et al 2012). Carefully monitoring for neuropathy and timely dose adjustment or treatment discontinuation is advocated depending on the neuropathy severity (Swain and Arezzo 2008). Neuropathy is increasingly recognized as a dose-limiting side effect and 20% dose reduction is one proposed strategy (Valero 2013). This entity is also discussed in the section on chemotherapy-induced neuropathy.

Leflunomide. The immunosuppressive prodrug leflunomide was FDA approved in late 1998 as a disease-modifying rheumatoid arthritis treatment. It was subsequently recognized that an axonal, sometimes painful, sensorimotor polyneuropathy is associated with leflunomide (Carulli and Davies 2002; Bonnel and Graham 2004; Metzler et al 2005). Eighty cases reported to the FDA were uncovered and described (Bonnel and Graham 2004). After this report, additional series have been reported identifying numerous additional probable cases (Bharadwaj and Haroon 2004; Martin et al 2005; Kho and Kermode 2007). Bharadwaj and Haroon describe 150 prospectively tracked rheumatoid arthritis patients in India. Fifty received leflunomide either as monotherapy or in combination with other drugs. Five developed new neuropathy (10%) in contrast to 2 of 100 receiving other treatments (2%). Nerve biopsy in 3 demonstrated epineural perivascular inflammation around small and medium-sized arterioles patchily affecting large and small myelinated nerve fibers suggesting a predominant axonopathy with features of vasculitis. All showed clinical improvement and were said to become asymptomatic within 3 months, but residual nerve conduction abnormalities remained (Bharadwaj and Haroon 2004). Kopp and colleagues describe a case and suggest a potential interaction between 5-FU and leflunomide and include the possible mechanism (Kopp et al 2005). Onset is usually after 3 to 6 months of drug use, although symptoms may appear sooner. Another study compared 16 rheumatoid arthritis patients treated with leflunomide with 16 others receiving alternative disease-modifying therapies. Neuropathy symptoms scores increased in 54% of the leflunomide group compared with 8% of the others; however, electrophysiology did not correlate with clinical symptoms (Richards et al 2007). Stopping therapy within 30 days of symptom onset gives a better chance of improvement, though recovery is typically slow. Sural nerve biopsies have shown nonspecific axonal loss in most, but signs of perivascular inflammation have been described. Primary rheumatoid arthritis is an independent neuropathy risk factor often associated with vasculitis, but leflunomide reports have not generally described this type of pattern. Neuropathy incidence is higher than with rheumatoid arthritis alone or with other rheumatoid arthritis medications. One retrospective analysis found increased associated neuropathy risk with increasing age, diabetes, and the use of other potentially neurotoxic medication (Martin et al 2007). The mechanism of neurotoxicity is not known; neuropathy cases were not detected in clinical trials. The drug remains an effective treatment and efficacy appears to be similar to methotrexate and better than sulfasalazine. However, withdrawal rates are higher than methotrexate because of toxicity; peripheral neuropathy is one of several forms of toxicity (Alcorn et al 2009). Comparison of 94 rheumatoid arthritis patients treated with either leflunomide or other disease modifying agents found significant differences in quantitative cold but not vibration perception measures; leflunomide-treated patients were roughly twice as likely to have increased cold perception measures (Kim et al 2012).

A similar agent, teriflunomide, is now approved in the United States to treat multiple sclerosis. Paresthesia and peripheral neuropathy are associated with this agent as well but the neuropathy risk and incidence are not yet known. Clinical trial data suggest an incidence of 1% to 2%, but no aftermarket reports of significant neuropathy cases are known.

Lipid-lowering agents. The statin-class of cholesterol medications acts by inhibiting the rate-limiting step in cholesterol synthesis, hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG CoA). The predominant neuromuscular complication with these agents is a toxic myopathy referred to as cholesterol-lowering agent myopathy, which is well appreciated by physicians and patients. An increasingly recognized acute necrotizing myositis with rhabdomyolysis associated with antibodies against the HMG CoA enzyme can develop. However, a number of cases of peripheral neuropathy temporally associated with conventional doses of simvastatin and other agents in the class have been reported (Jacobs 1994; Ahmad 1995; Phan et al 1995; Ziajka and Wehmeier 1998; Jeppesen et al 1999; Lo et al 2003). Partial or complete recovery after drug cessation is described. One report described sural biopsy data demonstrating small and large fiber axonal loss (Phan et al 1995). Several cases have serial electrophysiological studies showing sensorimotor axonal neuropathy with variable levels of subsequent improvement. No experimental model to support the effect is known. Symptom onset has been described within days to as long as several years after onset. One case described neuropathy onset after several years of treatment with lovastatin; when treatment stopped, the condition improved (Ziajka and Wehmeier 1998). Rechallenge with pravastatin, simvastatin, and later atorvastatin each caused a subacute recurrence of burning dysesthesias that improved with cessation. Similar rapid worsening with rechallenge has been noted in other reports. One speculative mechanism proposed is that inhibition of mitochondrial hydroxymethylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase causes a subsequent decrease of ubiquinone synthesis, which potentially may disturb neuronal energy utilization (Walravens et al 1989).

Thus, only the temporal association with the neuropathy development and subsequent improvement was available to support a causative link until a case control study reported by Gaist and colleagues (Gaist et al 2002). Gaist and colleagues suspected a possible link between these agents and cases of idiopathic neuropathy, despite an earlier negative United Kingdom study (Gaist et al 2001). They then conducted a much larger population-based study in 1 Danish county (465,000 inhabitants) and cross referenced a prescription registry to a national patient diagnosis registry from 1994 to 1998, when statin use in Denmark increased from 11,547 to 50,318 nationwide. Gaist and colleagues identified 1084 registered patients with a diagnosis of polyneuropathy. They excluded 492 with onset prior to 1994 or concurrent cause of neuropathy (diabetes, renal failure, monoclonal gammopathy, etc.). Only cases with clinical signs of distal, symmetric neuropathy and an adequate workup including electrodiagnostic studies were analyzed and categorized as definite, probable, or possible idiopathic neuropathy. Twenty-five controls were randomly chosen per index case. Thirty-five definite, 54 probable, and 77 possible neuropathy cases from the registry (166 total) were found. Nine had been exposed to statins including simvastatin, pravastatin, lovastatin, and fluvastatin. Odds ratios were calculated as 4.6% overall with current users of statins compared to controls and 16.1% with definite neuropathy cases compared to controls. The researchers also calculated an interesting number needed to harm measure and found, based on their odds ratios, 1 excess case of idiopathic peripheral neuropathy for every 2,200 person-years of statin use. Considered in this way, neuropathy was suggested as a more important public health concern than myopathy in patients taking statins. However, potential pitfalls complicate the study, such as whether all symptomatic neuropathy causes were in fact excluded. Examples of complicating disorders include conditions associated with statin use, such as occult diabetes, glucose intolerance, or metabolic syndrome. (Donaghy 2002); however, not all series found a clear association with statins and idiopathic neuropathy (Anderson et al 2005). Despite the rarity of the association, the large number of patients who take these medications makes the association potentially clinically relevant. Further uncertainty was raised in 2007 by the announcement at the meeting of the American Diabetes Association of the large 8-year long Australian Fremantle study of nearly 1300 diabetic patients that demonstrated significantly decreased risk of developing neuropathy in patients treated with statins or fibrates compared to untreated patients. The reduction was 35% and 48%, respectively (Davis et al 2008). Experimental evidence suggests that the statin rosuvastatin improves a mouse model of diabetic neuropathy through improved microcirculation independent of cholesterol lowering effects (Ii et al 2005). The combination of studies and evidence challenges the importance of the earlier Gaist results; statin neuropathy likely occurs but may be much less frequent than recently thought and appears to be neuroprotective in some settings.

One possible case following initiation of simvastatin rapidly developed into neuropathy mimicking Guillain-Barré syndrome; a pravastatin challenge 6 months earlier had led to milder symptoms. The combination suggested a possible hypersensitivity reaction (Rajabally et al 2004). In contrast, lovastatin attenuated nerve injury in an experimental model of experimental allergic neuritis. The effect was blocked by mevalonate (Sarkey et al 2007).

There is no supportive experimental model of the potentially toxic effects, but alteration of membrane function though inhibition of cholesterol synthesis, reduction of axon transport, and inhibition of mitochondrial function have been suggested as possible factors. Interference with selenoprotein synthesis, a well-established pathway also implicated in some hereditary muscle disorders, has been postulated to be causative but probably relates better to myotoxicity. Myopathy from severe selenium deficiency shares some features with statin-induced myopathy (Moosmann and Behl 2004).

Lithium. Lithium has been associated with neuropathy in rare cases. Isolated reports describe the onset of typical toxic neuropathy manifestations after prolonged exposure (Tomasina et al 1990); however, most reports are after acute intoxication or overdose (Brust et al 1979; Uchigata et al 1981; Pamphlett and Mackenzie 1982; Chang et al 1988; Vanhooren et al 1990; Johnston et al 1991; Merwick et al 2011; Chan et al 2012). Excessive levels can occur due, in part, to the narrow therapeutic range of the drug; moreover, neuropathic findings may be underrecognized. Some reported cases are complicated by more generalized toxicity including cerebral impairment with the neuropathy becoming evident only with subsequent recovery. Secondary infections are also problematic, raising the issue of critical illness neuromyopathy in some instances. No convincing experimental evidence is known other than an isolated report suggesting a tendency toward reduced nerve fiber area in rats chronically given lithium over control animals (Licht et al 1997). In fact, in a small series, lithium has been reported to blunt the symptoms of vincristine-associated neuropathy in both mice and humans (Petrini et al 1999). More recently, lithium pretreatment was found to attenuate neuropathy in paclitaxel-treated mice possibly by interacting with paclitaxel-related intracellular calcium signaling pathways (Mo et al 2012).

Phenelzine. Phenelzine is a rarely used monoamine oxidase inhibitor for atypical or refractory depression. Side effects such as hypertensive crises and serious reactions with other agents are well known. Rarely, this agent (but not other MAOIs) has been implicated in inducing peripheral neuropathy. Phenelzine has been shown to affect pyridoxine metabolism and reduce measurable active pyridoxal phosphate levels in humans (Malcolm et al 1994). The compound is in the same chemical class as hydralazine and isoniazid, which both reduce pyridoxal phosphate levels and can cause peripheral neuropathy. Whether this effect is clinically relevant remains to be seen. Malcolm and colleagues demonstrated pyridoxal phosphate levels reduced, on average, by half in 19 patients on phenelzine, but none developed clinical symptoms (Malcolm et al 1994). Several reports of neuropathy associated with phenelzine have been published (Heller and Friedman 1983; Goodheart et al 1991). The neuropathy is described as a typical toxic neuropathy with sensorimotor axonal involvement with predominantly sensory manifestations.

Phenytoin. Peripheral neuropathy from chronic phenytoin use has been long recognized and generally accepted. However, despite many reported patient series, the phenomenon is based on relatively few uncomplicated prospective studies. Most likely, there is a probable effect of protracted use, especially with serum levels chronically higher than 20 µg/ml (in excess of the standard therapeutic range). Peripheral neuropathy was more commonly seen early in the history of phenytoin use when doses of 500 mg/day or higher were not uncommon. However, many of the earlier series had relatively few patients on phenytoin monotherapy, and the contributions of acute reversible phenomena were not taken into account. At current dosages with monitored serum levels, peripheral neuropathy is rare and typically produces only asymptomatic examination findings or minimally discernible neuropathy after many years of therapy. The incidence of neuropathy in epileptics on phenytoin varies considerably depending on patient populations and criteria employed (Lovelace and Horwitz 1968; Eisen et al 1974; Swift et al 1981; Shorvon and Reynolds 1982; Taylor et al 1985). Several variables have been proposed as risk factors for neuropathy development, including supra-therapeutic serum levels (greater than 20 µg/ml), protracted use (less than 10 years), and low folate levels (Lovelace and Horwitz 1968; Eisen et al 1974; Chokroverty and Sayeed 1975; Shorvon and Reynolds 1982). Other series have not found any significant association with phenytoin use compared with other anticonvulsants or these risk factors (Swift et al 1981; Taylor et al 1985). Swift and colleagues found signs of neuropathy in epileptic patients on various therapies and showed a higher incidence among patients on phenobarbital (Swift et al 1981). One case with long-term chronically elevated serum levels (31 to 38.5 µg/ml) had clinically symptomatic neuropathy, and sural nerve biopsy demonstrated mild decreases in large diameter axonal number, axonal shrinkage, and secondary demyelination (Ramirez et al 1986). This patient improved clinically and on electrophysiologic studies subsequent to phenytoin cessation.

In addition, there appears to be separate acute effects on nerve function. Acute exposure to high-dose phenytoin causes reversible slowing of nerve conduction velocity. Phenytoin affects sodium permeability across neuronal membranes by stabilizing inactive sodium channels (Macdonald 1994). Phenytoin in myelinated nerve preparations produces a voltage-dependent block of sodium channels, a shift of the sodium channel inactivation curve to more negative voltages, and a reduced rate of sodium channel recovery from inactivation (Schwarz 1989). However, carbamazepine produced some of these effects as well. Several animal studies have examined the effects of phenytoin on peripheral nerve function. Acute reversible effects have been produced with reduced conduction velocity and compound motor action potentials with acute high dose phenytoin administration in rats (Marcus et al 1981) and slow velocity after several days in guinea pigs (LeQuesne et al 1976). Serum levels were higher than 50 µg/ml. This reversible phenomenon likely represents a physiologic effect but is not a model of long-term toxicity. Some degree of acute reversible effects may have complicated some prior studies that examined chronic toxicity on high dose therapy. A human report has described similar reversible symptomatic effects 3 hours after a phenytoin loading dose (Yoshikawa et al 1999). This may represent an additional acute or subacute idiosyncratic syndrome, but a separate syndrome is not well established. The acute reversible effects on nerve function are well established, but the chronic neuropathy is considered a probable association (Mann et al 2000).

Proton pump inhibitors. A rare effect of commonly used medications can be particularly problematic to resolve and substantiate. One example is the proton pump inhibitors omeprazole and lansoprazole. Rajabally and Jacob reported a 42-year-old woman who developed predominantly sensory neuropathy after 3 months of lansoprazole use (Rajabally and Jacob 2005). Some partial improvement was noted after later stopping the medication, and no worsening was seen after switching to rabeprazole and then to ranitidine. Three other cases are reported with omeprazole, 2 of which have adequate electrophysiology and clinical information (Faucheux et al 1998). Additional carefully studied examples are needed to further substantiate this possible link with medication-induced neuropathy in this widely used class of medications. No new cases have been published as of the most recent literature search since these reports despite continued widespread use of these agents. However, these agents and histamine-2 blockers may affect vitamin B12 absorption and lead to secondary neurologic complications (Lam et al 2013).

Slaughterhouse workers progressive inflammatory neuropathy.
Although not technically a medication-induced neuropathy, this local toxic epidemic at several pork processing plants in Minnesota and surrounding states produced considerable activity and investigation by numerous researchers, mostly at the Centers for Disease Control (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) 2008). Twelve workers in a swine slaughterhouse in Minnesota developed a progressive inflammatory neuropathy with symptoms ranging from acute paralysis to gradually progressive symmetric weakness predominantly in the legs from 8 to 213 days with varying severity between November 2006 and 2007. Eleven patients had evidence of axonal or demyelinating features by electrodiagnostic testing. Spinal fluid from 7 patients showed elevated protein (mean 120 mg/dl) with no or minimal pleocytosis. Ten patients had evidence of inflammation on spinal magnetic resonance imaging (9 patients in peripheral nerves or roots and 1 patient in the anterior spinal cord). Three patients with sural nerve biopsy showed mild perivascular inflammation. In summary, patients were characterized with a sensory greater than motor polyradiculopathy, predominantly at the root or distal nerve level. The CDC researchers identified that all patients were working in close proximity to swine heads. A compressed air device used to liquefy porcine brain material may have generated aerosolized brain material, which may have induced an immune neurotoxic response. Ultimately work at the Mayo Clinic led by Vanda Lennon found a complex autoantibody profile dominated by neural cation channel IgGs that most significantly affected voltage-gated potassium channels (Meeusen et al 2012).

Tacrolimus. Prograf, previously known as FK-506, is a novel immunosuppressant that is widely used in transplant medicine and for suppression of some inflammatory disorders. The agent is a macrolide antibiotic that suppresses both cellular and humoral mediated immune responses. Neurotoxicity is common in treated patients, in part, because of the relatively high doses usually given. Central toxicity is more common with a variety of findings including leukoencephalopathy, seizures, behavioral changes, headache, or other cortical signs, many of which are dose dependent. Peripheral neuropathy appears to take the form of a severe multifocal demyelinating neuropathy that resembles chronic inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy (Wilson et al 1994; Bronster et al 1995; Labate et al 2010). Patients have responded to IVIG or plasmapheresis as well.

Both cyclosporin A and tacrolimus act through inhibition of calcineurin, though by different means (tacrolimus binding protein: FKBP-12) (Snyder et al 1998). The calcineurin inhibition, through several steps, decreases IL-2 and eventually T-cell proliferation. This pathway is also the likely cause of much of the central neurotoxicity and possibly the peripheral effects. Tacrolimus also has an additional separate function through a different binding protein, FKBP-52, that acts as a nerve stimulator, increases growth associated protein (GAP-43), and is beneficial to nerve regeneration in nerve axotomy and ischemia models (Gold et al 1998; Kihara et al 2001). FKBP-52 is part of a steroid receptor complex and may represent a target for future regenerative therapies separate from the growth factor and Trk pathways. The mechanism of why, in some patients, an immune attack that resembles chronic inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy or other autoimmune neuropathy is unclear; however, the number of reported examples is small. Interestingly, tacrolimus has also been shown to have significant and potentially therapeutic neuroregenerative activity, possibly derived from a separate pathway from the immunosuppressive calcineurin inhibition--FKBP-52 binding protein (Kvist et al 2003; Gold et al 2004). Schwann cells may play an important intermediary role (Birge et al 2004). A similar agent, sirolimus, appears to have less risk of this reaction but at least 1 case is reported (Bilodeau et al 2008).

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha blockers. Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) blockers are used in the treatment of various forms of inflammatory arthritis and inflammatory bowel diseases but are also associated with inducing or worsening other autoimmune disorders including multiple sclerosis (Stubgen 2008). One agent (etanercept) has been reported to improve chronic inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy (CIDP) (Latov and Sherman 2000; Chin et al 2003). Postmarketing reporting identified 15 patients diagnosed with Guillain-Barré syndrome or Miller Fisher syndrome from 6 weeks to 2 years after starting a TNF-alpha blocker, although associated infection may be a more important risk factor (Robinson et al 2001; Shin et al 2006). One case developed acute sensorimotor neuropathy and concomitant encephalopathy (Faivre et al 2010). Richez and colleagues reported 2 cases that developed a CIDP-like illness (Richez et al 2005). One treated with etanercept for rheumatoid arthritis developed a demyelinating neuropathy 17 months later. The other received infliximab for ankylosing spondylitis and developed CIDP 3 months later. Both incompletely improved after drug cessation without specific treatment for CIDP. Infliximab is also associated with several other CIDP-like cases with underlying rheumatoid arthritis (Jarand et al 2006; Tektonidou et al 2007; Alshekhlee et al 2010) and 3 cases with underlying psoriatic arthritis, a condition which is much less likely to induce spontaneous or vasculitic neuropathy (Stubgen 2008; Eguren et al 2009). Numerous cases resembling multifocal motor neuropathy are also reported in association with infliximab (Singer 2004; Cocito et al 2005; Rodriguez-Escalera et al 2005; Paolazzi et al 2009). However, others question whether some of these cases were actually a form of vasculitic mononeuritis multiplex triggered by the infliximab (Birnbaum 2007). One case of proposed infliximab-associated immune-mediated sensory polyradiculopathy was successfully treated with intravenous gammaglobulin (Naruse et al 2013). There are additional less clear associations with mononeuropathy and axonal sensory or sensorimotor neuropathy (Jarand et al 2006). In any event, it seems that infliximab and etanercept can contribute to or trigger an immune-mediated neuropathy in some possibly susceptible patients (Kotyla et al 2007). Adalimumab is not clearly associated with chronic neuropathy but was associated with one possible Guillain-Barré syndrome case. Ipilimumab, a monoclonal antibody that is not a TNF alpha antagonist but instead blocks a natural inhibitor of cytotoxic T-cell response to cancer cells, is approved to treat melanoma and is undergoing trials for other cancer types. A case of acute neuropathy mimicking Guillain-Barré syndrome is reported; acute enteric neuropathy is also recognized (Gaudy et al 2013).

Interestingly, in light of the fluoroquinolone story discussed earlier, peripheral neuropathy associated with TNF-alpha agents was the most common adverse neurologic event reported to the Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System (296 reports, 38.3%), exceeding central nervous system and/or spinal cord demyelination (153 reports, 19.8%) (Deepak et al 2013). The majority of reports (71%) were labeled as “possibly associated” and not higher grades of certainty.

In contrast, these agents may have other protective properties. A mouse model of bortezomib neuropathy found that upregulation of TNF-alpha was neuroprotective, possibly by limiting certain inflammatory cytokines (Ale et al 2014).

Zimeldine. Zimeldine is another agent never approved for use in the United States but available transiently as an antidepressant in Sweden, functioning as a 5-HT reuptake inhibitor with purported fewer side effects. The drug is best known as a probable precipitating factor of an outbreak of Guillain-Barré syndrome in Sweden in 1983. The drug was withdrawn from the market 18 months after introduction because of this outbreak. A subsequent Bayesian analysis concluded that the association was supported by relevant data (Naranjo et al 1990). No additional cases, however, were identified in a retrospective review of 761 patients on zimeldine reported more recently from the same region (Bengtsson et al 1994). Hypersensitivity reactions are relatively common with this agent (1.4% to 13%), raising the question of potential immune-mediated mechanisms in this phenomenon. Zimeldine appears to affect T-cell function and blunt experimental allergic neuritis in a rat model of Guillain-Barré syndrome (Bengtsson et al 1992). The risk of developing Guillain-Barré syndrome from zimeldine was estimated as increased 25-fold compared to natural incidence controls (Fagius et al 1985).

http://www.medmerits.com/index.php/article/drug_induced_neuropathies/P3

Friday, September 1, 2017

BIOCHEMISTS SOLVE ADDRESS PROBLEM IN CELLS THAT LEADS TO LETHAL KIDNEY DISEASE




Research by UCLA biochemists may lead to a new treatment -- or even a cure -- for PH1, a rare and potentially deadly genetic kidney disease that afflicts children. Their findings also may provide important insights into treatments for Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and other degenerative diseases.
Led by Carla Koehler, a professor of chemistry and biochemistry in the UCLA College, the researchers identified a compound called dequalinium chloride, or DECA, that can prevent a metabolic enzyme from going to the wrong location within a cell. Ensuring that the enzyme -- called alanine: glyoxylate aminotransferase, or AGT -- goes to the proper "address" in the cell prevents PH1.
The findings were published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and will appear later in the journal's print edition.
In humans, AGT is supposed to go to an organelle inside the cell called the peroxisome, but for people with a particular genetic mutation, the enzyme mistakenly goes instead to the mitochondria -- tiny power generators in cells that burn food and produce most of the cells' energy -- which causes PH1.
Koehler's team demonstrated that adding small amounts of DECA, which is FDA-approved, to cells in a Petri dish prevents AGT from going to the mitochondria and sends it to its proper destination, the peroxisome.
"In many mutations that cause diseases, the enzyme doesn't work," Koehler said. "In PH1 the enzyme does work, but it goes to the wrong part of the cell. We wanted to use DECA in a cell model to block AGT from going to the wrong address and send it back to the right address. DECA blocks the mitochondria 'mailbox' and takes it to the peroxisome address instead."
How often did it work?
"All the time," said Koehler, a member of UCLA's Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, Molecular Biology Institute and Brain Research Institute.
For people with the mutation, the correct peroxisome address is present in AGT, but it is ignored because it is accompanied by the address of the mitochondria, which the cell reads first, Koehler said.
Koehler, who also is a member of the scientific and medical advisory board of the United Mitochondrial Disease Foundation, hopes to find out whether a similar "correct address" strategy can slow cancer down. Her laboratory has identified approximately 100 other small molecules, which she calls MitoBloCKs, that she and her colleagues are testing for their ability to combat Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and other diseases.
PH1 -- short for primary hyperoxaluria 1 -- starts at birth and is usually fatal for patients who do not receive both kidney and liver transplants. Approximately half of those with the disease have kidney failure by age 15. Koehler has presented her findings to the Oxalosis and Hyperoxaluria Foundation, which provides support for PH1 patients and their families.
Scientists' ability to diagnose rare diseases has improved in recent years because technological advances in genomics have made it easier to identify more genetic mutations, Koehler said.
According to Koehler, to treat diseases, scientists must first understand how proteins like AGT move inside the cell. Her research, which encompasses biochemistry, genetics and cell biology, studies how mitochondria are assembled and function, how proteins enter the mitochondria and reach the right location inside cells, and how mitochondria communicate with the rest of the cell.
Her laboratory uses model systems that enable them to study the biochemistry in a way that is not possible with humans. Much of the work is conducted in yeast.
"It's exciting that our studies in baker's yeast, a typical laboratory model, might be able to help kids with a complicated disease," Koehler said.


Monday, August 21, 2017

Chronic Inflammatory Neuropathy Is That What You Have


Today's post from nlm.nih.gov (see link below) may confuse some readers; partly because there are just way too many names for neuropathic conditions but also because they're not sure if their symptoms are 'bad' enough to qualify as having chronic inflammatory neuropathy. This article describes what it is, what the symptoms are and why it happens, as well as showing some tests and assessments. The main difference lies in the cause - the immune system attacks the nervous system and gradually degrades nerves and their linings but after that, the reasons why can be (as you know) many and varied.

Chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy
 US National Library of medicine 2014
 
Chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy involves nerve swelling and irritation (inflammation) that leads to a loss of strength or sensation.

Causes

Chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy is one cause of damage to nerves outside the brain or spinal cord (peripheral neuropathy). Polyneuropathy means several nerves are involved. It usually affects both sides of the body equally.

Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) is the most common chronic neuropathy caused by an abnormal immune response. CIDP occurs when the immune system attacks the myelin cover of the nerves.

The cause of chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy is an abnormal immune response. The specific triggers vary. In many cases, the cause cannot be identified.

It may occur with other conditions, such as:

Autoimmune disorders
Chronic hepatitis
Diabetes
HIV
Inflammatory bowel disease
Systemic lupus erythematosus
Lymphoma
Paraneoplastic syndrome
Thyrotoxicosis
Side effects of medicines to treat cancer or HIV

Symptoms

Difficulty walking due to weakness or trouble feeling your feet
Difficulty using the arms and hands or legs and feet due to weakness
Sensation changes, such as numbness or decreased sensation, pain, burning, tingling, or other abnormal sensations (usually affects the feet first, then the arms and hands)
Weakness, usually in the arms and hands or legs and feet

Other symptoms that can occur with this disease:
Abnormal movement
Breathing difficulty
Fatigue
Hoarseness or changing voice
Loss of function or feeling in the muscles
Muscle atrophy
Muscle contractions
Speech impairment
Swallowing difficulty
Uncoordinated movement

Exams and Tests

The doctor will examine you and ask questions about your medical history. The physical exam shows:
Loss of muscle mass
No reflexes
Muscle weakness or paralysis
Sensation problems on both sides of the body

Tests may include:
Electromyography (EMG)
Nerve conduction tests
Nerve biopsy
Spinal tap
Blood tests may be done to look for specific proteins that are causing the immune attack on the nerves

Which other tests are done depends on the suspected cause of the condition. Tests may include x-rays, imaging scans, and blood tests.

Treatment

The goal of treatment is to reverse the attack on the nerves. In some cases, nerves can heal and their function can be restored. In other cases, nerves are badly damaged and cannot heal, so treatment is aimed at preventing the disease from getting worse.

Which treatment is given depends on how severe the symptoms are, among other things. The most aggressive treatment is usually only given if you have difficulty walking or if symptoms interfere with your ability to care for yourself or perform work functions.

Treatments may include:

Corticosteroids to help reduce inflammation and relieve symptoms
Other medications that suppress the immune system (for some severe cases)
Plasmapheresis or plasma exchange to remove antibodies from the blood
Intravenous immune globulin (IVIg), which involves adding large numbers of antibodies to the blood plasma to reduce the effect of the antibodies that are causing the problem

Outlook (Prognosis)

The outcome varies. The disorder may continue long term, or you may have repeated episodes of symptoms. Complete recovery is possible, but permanent loss of nerve function is not uncommon.

Possible Complications

Pain
Permanent decrease or loss of sensation in areas of the body
Permanent weakness or paralysis in areas of the body
Repeated or unnoticed injury to an area of the body
Side effects of medications used to treat the disorder

When to Contact a Medical Professional

Call your health care provider if you have a loss of movement or sensation in any area of the body, especially if your symptoms get worse.

Alternative Names


Polyneuropathy - chronic inflammatory; CIDP; Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathyPolyneuropathy - chronic inflammatory; CIDP; Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy

References

Katirji B, Koontz D. Disorders of peripheral nerves. In: Daroff RB, Fenichel GM, Jankovic J, Mazziotta JC, eds.Katirji B, Koontz D. Disorders of peripheral nerves. In: Daroff RB, Fenichel GM, Jankovic J, Mazziotta JC, eds. Bradley's Neurology in Clinical Practice. 6th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier Saunders; 2012:chap 76.

Shy ME. Peripheral neuropathies. In: Goldman L, Schafer AI, eds.Shy ME. Peripheral neuropathies. In: Goldman L, Schafer AI, eds. Goldman's Cecil Medicine. 24th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier Saunders; 2011:chap 428.

Update Date 7/27/2014

Updated by: Joseph V. Campellone, MD, Department of Neurology, Cooper University Hospital, Camden, NJ. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Isla Ogilvie, PhD, and the A.D.A.M. Editorial team.

https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000777.htm

Sunday, August 20, 2017

Cell Toxins That Cause Neuropathy


Today's post from source.wustl.edu (see link below) attempts (successfully) to put some very complex information into words that we as lay readers can pretty much understand. It talks about the toxins produced by Schwann cells which 'leak' out onto adjacent axons and damage them, causing the nerve pain we feel with neuropathy. However, these toxins have been called into action by the mitochondria (energy generators of the cells) which have been damaged themselves and no longer produce the energy needed to make nerve cells work normally. With me so far? Probably not but this article explains the whole process and teaches us how nerves and their complex structures actually work. Finding drugs to block this toxin production is the aim. Have a read. You might surprise yourself how quickly you form a picture of what's going on with neuropathy.
 

New clues to causes of peripheral nerve damage
By Caroline Arbanas March 6, 2013

Anyone whose hand or foot has “fallen asleep” has an idea of the numbness and tingling often experienced by people with peripheral nerve damage. The condition also can cause a range of other symptoms, including unrelenting pain, stinging, burning, itching and sensitivity to touch.

Although peripheral neuropathies afflict some 20 million Americans, their underlying causes are not completely understood. Much research has focused on the breakdown of cellular energy factories in nerve cells as a contributing factor.

Now, new research at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis points to a more central role in damage to energy factories in other cells: Schwann cells, which grow alongside neurons and enable nerve signals to travel from the spinal cord to the tips of the fingers and toes.

The finding may lead to new therapeutic strategies to more effectively treat symptoms of this highly variable disorder, the scientists reported March 6 in the journal Neuron.

“We found that a toxic substance builds up in Schwann cells that have disabled energy factories, leading to the same kind of nerve damage seen in patients with neuropathies,” said senior author Jeffrey Milbrandt, MD, PhD, the James S. McDonnell Professor of Genetics and head of the Department of Genetics. “Now, we’re evaluating whether drugs can block the buildup of that toxin, which could lead to a new treatment for the condition.”

The most common cause of peripheral neuropathy is diabetes, which accounts for about half of all cases. The condition also can occur in cancer patients treated with chemotherapy, which can damage nerves.

In the body, Schwann cells wrap tightly around nerve axons, the fibers that relay nerve signals. Graduate student and first author Andreu Viader and colleagues in Milbrandt’s lab studied Schwann cells in mice with genetically disabled mitochondria, or cellular energy factories. Under normal conditions, these mitochondria produce fuel and intermediates of energy metabolism that allow nerve cells to function.

The researchers showed that the crippled mitochondria activated a stress response in the Schwann cells. Instead of synthesizing fatty acids, a key component of Schwann cells, the cells burned fatty acids for fuel.





Over time, inefficient burning of fatty acids by the crippled mitochondria leads to a build up of acylcarnitines, a toxic substance, in the Schwann cells. The researchers found levels of acylcarnitines up to 100-fold higher in these mutant Schwann cells than in healthy Schwann cells.

And the bad news doesn’t end there. Eventually, the toxin leaks out of the Schwann cells and onto the nerve axons. Studying neurons in petri dishes, the researchers showed that acylcarnitines damage nerve axons and disrupt the ability of nerves to relay signals.

“The toxin leaking out of the Schwann cells and onto the adjacent nerve axons causes damage that results in pain, numbness, tingling and other symptoms,” Milbrandt said. “We think that is a likely mechanism to explain the degeneration of axons that is known to occur in peripheral neuropathies.”

The new research suggests that drugs that inhibit the buildup of acylcarnitines may block axonal degeneration. Milbrandt and his team now are evaluating the drugs in mice with disabled Schwann cells to see if they can slow or alleviate the decay of axons. The research is supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Neuroscience Blueprint Center Core Grant (P30 NS057105), the HOPE Center for Neurological Disorders and the National Institutes of Health (AG13730 and PPG 2P01 HL057278).

Viader A, Sasaki Y, Kim S, Strickland A, Workman CS, Yang K, Cross RW, Milbrandt J. Aberrant Schwann cell lipid metabolism linked to mitochondrial deficits leads to axon degeneration and neuropathy. Neuron. March 6, 2013.

Washington University School of Medicine’s 2,100 employed and volunteer faculty physicians also are the medical staff of Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals. The School of Medicine is one of the leading medical research, teaching and patient care institutions in the nation, currently ranked sixth in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. Through its affiliations with Barnes-Jewish and St. Louis Children’s hospitals, the School of Medicine is linked to BJC HealthCare.

https://source.wustl.edu/2013/03/new-clues-to-causes-of-peripheral-nerve-damage/

Tuesday, August 15, 2017

Autonomic Neuropathy The Neuropathic Sniper That You Dont See Coming


Today's post from dressamed.com (see link below) is a no-nonsense and easy to understand article about autonomic neuropathy. For those of you who don't already know, this is nerve damage that affects many of the 'involuntary' actions that we take for granted in our daily lives, such as breathing, digestion, sexual response, blood pressure and many more. The problem with autonomic neuropathy is that it creeps up on you over a period of time and can seriously affect the quality of your life. If you're worried you may be heading in this direction, or already know what's happening, read the article, talk to your doctor and do as much of your own research as possible. By using the search button to the right of this blog, you will find many more articles about autonomic neuropathy and how best to learn to live with it and treat its symptoms.

When Neuropathy Affects Bodily Functions 
Posted on May 11, 2016 Posted in Staff Pick by Staff Pick

Do any of these symptoms sound familiar?


Dizziness and fainting when you stand up
Difficulty digesting food and feeling really full when you’ve barely eaten anything
Abnormal perspiration – either sweating excessively or barely at all
Intolerance for exercise – no, not that you just hate it but your heart rate doesn’t adjust as it should
Slow pupil reaction so that your eyes don’t adjust quickly to changes in light
Urinary problems like difficulty starting or inability to completely empty your bladder

If they do, you could have autonomic neuropathy. Especially if you have diabetes, your immune system is compromised by chemotherapy, HIV/AIDS, Parkinson’s disease, lupus, Guillian-Barre or any other chronic medical condition.

You need to see a doctor immediately. A good place to start would be a physician well versed in diagnosing and treating nerve disease and damage, like your local clinician who specializes in our treatment protocol.


What Is Autonomic Neuropathy?

Autonomic neuropathy in itself is not a disease. It’s a type of peripheral neuropathy that affects the nerves that control involuntary body functions like heart rate, blood pressure, digestion and perspiration. The nerves are damaged and don’t function properly leading to a break down of the signals between the brain and the parts of the body affected by the autonomic nervous system like the heart, blood vessels, digestive system and sweat glands.

That can lead to your body being unable to regulate your heart rate or your blood pressure, an inability to properly digest your food, urinary problems, even being unable to sweat in order to cool your body down when you exercise.

Often, autonomic neuropathy is caused by other diseases or medical conditions so if you suffer from:


Diabetes
Alcoholism
Cancer
Systemic lupus
Parkinson’s disease
HIV/AIDS

Or any number of other chronic illnesses, you stand a much higher risk of developing autonomic neuropathy. Your best course of action is not to wait until you develop symptoms. Begin a course of preventative treatment and monitoring with a clinician to lessen your chances of developing autonomic neuropathy.


How Will The Clinician Diagnose My Autonomic Neuropathy?

If you have diabetes, cancer, HIV/AIDs or any of the other diseases or chronic conditions that can cause autonomic neuropathy, it’s much easier to diagnose autonomic neuropathy. After all, as a specialist in nerve damage and treatment, your clinician is very familiar with your symptoms and the best course of treatment.

If you have symptoms of autonomic neuropathy and don’t have any of the underlying conditions, your diagnosis will be a little tougher but not impossible.

Either way, your clinician will take a very thorough history and physical. Make sure you have a list of all your symptoms, when they began, how severe they are, what helps your symptoms or makes them worse, and any and all medications your currently take (including over the counter medications, herbal supplements or vitamins).

Be honest with your clinician about your diet, alcohol intake, frequency of exercise, history of drug use and smoking. If you don’t tell the truth, you’re not giving your clinician a clear picture of your physical condition. That’s like asking him to drive you from Montreal to Mexico City without a map or a GPS. You may eventually get to where you want to be, but it’s highly unlikely.

Once your history and physical are completed, your clinician will order some tests. Depending upon your actual symptoms and which systems seem to be affected, these tests might include: 


Ultrasound
Urinalysis and bladder function tests
Thermoregulatory and/or QSART sweat tests
Gastrointestinal tests
Breathing tests
Tilt-table tests (to test your heart rate and blood pressure regulation). Once your tests are completed and your clinician determines you have autonomic neuropathy, it’s time for treatment. 


Treatment and Prognosis

Our clinicians are well versed in treating all types of peripheral neuropathy, including autonomic neuropathy. They adhere to a very specialized treatment protocol that was developed specifically for patients suffering from neuropathy. That’s why their treatments have been so successful – neuropathy in all its forms is what they do.

Autonomic neuropathy is a chronic condition but it can be treated and you can do things to help relieve your symptoms.

Your clinician will work with you and your other physicians to treat your neuropathy and manage your underlying condition. They do this through:

Diet Planning and Nutritional Support


You need to give your body the nutrition it needs to heal.

If you have gastrointestinal issues caused by autonomic neuropathy, you need to make sure you’re getting enough fiber and fluids to help your body function properly.

If you have diabetes, you need to follow a diet specifically designed for diabetics and to control your blood sugar.

If your autonomic neuropathy affects your urinary system, you need to retrain your bladder. You can do this by following a schedule of when to drink and when to empty your bladder to slowly increase your bladder’s capacity.

Individually Designed Exercise Programs


If you experience exercise intolerance or blood pressure problems resulting from autonomic neuropathy, you have to be every careful with your exercise program. Make sure that you don’t overexert yourself, take it slowly. Your clinician can design an exercise program specifically for you that will allow you to exercise but won’t push you beyond what your body is capable of. And, even more importantly, they will continually monitor your progress and adjust your program as needed.

Lifestyle Modifications

If your autonomic neuropathy causes dizziness when you stand up, then do it slowly and in stages. Flex your feet or grip your hands several times before you attempt to stand to increase the flow of blood to your hands and feet. Try just sitting on the side of your bed in the morning for a few minutes before you try to stand.

Change the amount and frequency of your meals if you have digestive problems.


Don’t try to do everything all at once. Decide what really needs to be done each day and do what you can. Autonomic neuropathy is a chronic disorder and living with any chronic condition requires adaptations. Your clinician knows this all too well and will work with you to manage your level of stress and change your daily routines to help you manage your condition and your life.

All of these changes in conjunction with medications, where needed, will make it easier to live with autonomic neuropathy and lessen the chances of serious complications. Early intervention with a NeuropathyDR® clinician is still the best policy if you have any of the underlying conditions that can cause autonomic neuropathy. But if you already have symptoms, start treatment immediately.

About The Author


Dr. John Hayes, Jr. is an Evvy Award Nominee and author of “Living and Practicing by Design” and “Beating Neuropathy-Taking Misery to Miracles in Just 5 Weeks!”. His work on peripheral neuropathy has expanded the specialty of effective neuropathy treatments to physicians, physical therapists and nurses. A free Ebook, CD and information packet on his unique services and trainings can be obtained by registering your information at neuropathydr.com. 


Syndicated by EzineArticles

https://www.dressamed.com/root/when-neuropathy-affects-bodily-functions/

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

An Opioid Without Side Effects For Nerve Pain Is That Possible


Today's post is from genengnews.com (see link below). Don't you just love reading an article that contains a sentence like: “Unlike the conventional opioid fentanyl, this agonist showed pH-sensitive binding, heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide–binding protein (G protein) subunit dissociation by fluorescence resonance energy transfer, and adenosine 3′,5′-monophosphate inhibition in vitro.”!! However, with this sort of text, you have to remember that the ordinary neuropathy patient is essentially not the target audience here and this sort of article needs to be read with a sort of 'skim' technique that gives you the gist of what's being said, while skipping over the techno-speak. The article talks about a new form of opioid that is being developed that does the pain-killing job very effectively but doesn't have the side-effects that the media and politicians just can't cope with at the moment. We have to applaud research in the opioid field that doesn't begin with a skull and crossbones declaration that 'all opioids are bad'. Here they are genuinely recognising the benefits of opioids while trying to eliminate the potential harmful side effects. The whole world seems to be searching for opioid alternatives at the moment (powerful lobby - the anti-opioidals!) when the logical thing to search for is opioid adaptations that make them more user-friendly. Worth a read - you'll get the message I promise you.

Opioid Acts Only on Hurt Tissues, Skips Side Effects 
March 6, 2017 Gen News Highlights

  A new opioid can target “disease-specific” (pathological rather than physiological) conformations of receptors and ligands by selectively activating opioid receptors where acidic conditions prevail, as in tissues affected by inflammation or injury. Thus, the opioid brings pain relief at the site of inflammation and does not affect healthy tissues, such as those of the brain or intestinal wall, thereby avoiding side effects. [G. Del Vecchio & V. Spahn/Freepik]

Opioids, like sledgehammers, are powerful but blunt tools. When they are used to flatten pain, opioids may give other things a pounding, too. The problem is conventional opioids act on inflamed or damaged tissues as well as healthy tissues. Consequently, while opioids may relieve pain, they may also cause serious side effects, such as drowsiness, nausea, constipation, and dependency—and in some cases, respiratory arrest.

In hopes of finding a way to craft finer painkilling tools, scientists based at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin scrutinized different ways opioids can interact with opioid receptors. These scientists, led by Prof. Dr. Christoph Stein, were on the lookout for “disease-specific” opioid receptor-ligand conformations. That is, the scientists plan was to exploit pathological (rather than physiological) conformation dynamics in the design of new opioids, and thereby create drugs that would target damaged or inflamed tissues yet bypass healthy tissues.

"By analyzing drug–opioid receptor interactions in damaged tissues, as opposed to healthy tissues, we were hoping to provide useful information for the design of new painkillers without harmful side effects," said Prof. Dr. Stein.

Prof. Dr. Stein’s team was aware that previous strategies in drug development had focused on central opioid receptors in noninjured environments, even though many painful syndromes (such as arthritis, neuropathy, and surgery) are driven by peripheral sensory neurons and are typically accompanied by inflammation with tissue acidosis. Ultimately, the team decided that this alternative mechanism of action—the binding and activation of peripheral opioid receptors—could be preferentially exploited by a new class of opioids. The key was the occurrence of acid conditions.

By following through on this idea, the scientists designed a new opioid that, unlike clinically used opioids, best activates the receptors in acidified tissues. When the new opioid was evaluated in a rat model of inflammatory pain, it exerted strong pain relief essentially without the side effects of standard opioids.

Details appeared March 3 in the journal Science, in an article entitled, “A Nontoxic Pain Killer Designed by Modeling of Pathological Receptor Conformations.” The article describes how the scientists used computer modeling to analyze morphine-like molecules and their interactions with opioid receptors. In particular, computer modeling was used to simulate an increased concentration of protons, thereby mimicking the acidic conditions found in inflamed tissues.

“By computer simulations at low pH, a hallmark of injured tissue, we designed an agonist that, because of its low acid dissociation constant, selectively activates peripheral μ-opioid receptors at the source of pain generation,” wrote the article’s authors. “Unlike the conventional opioid fentanyl, this agonist showed pH-sensitive binding, heterotrimeric guanine nucleotide–binding protein (G protein) subunit dissociation by fluorescence resonance energy transfer, and adenosine 3′,5′-monophosphate inhibition in vitro.”

The authors observed that their novel opioid produced injury-restricted analgesia in rats with different types of inflammatory pain without exhibiting respiratory depression, sedation, constipation, or addiction potential. These results, the authors suggested, mean that treating postoperative and chronic inflammatory pain should now be possible without causing side effects. Doing so would substantially improve patient quality of life.

“In contrast to conventional opioids, our NFEPP-prototype appears to only bind to, and activate, opioid receptors in an acidic environment,” explained the study's first authors, Dr. Viola Spahn and Dr. Giovanna Del Vecchio. “This means it produces pain relief only in injured tissues, and without causing respiratory depression, drowsiness, the risk of dependency, or constipation."

"We were able to show that the protonation of drugs is a key requirement for the activation of opioid receptors," the authors concluded. Their findings, which may also apply to other types of pain, may even find application in other areas of receptor research. Thereby, the benefits of improved drug efficacy and tolerability are not limited to painkillers, but may include other drugs as well.

http://www.genengnews.com/gen-news-highlights/opioid-acts-only-on-hurt-tissues-skips-side-effects/81253978

Monday, July 17, 2017

Idiopathic Neuropathy Whats That All About!


Today's post from footpaincenter.com (see link below) looks at the neuropathy diagnosis that can drive people to distraction because they feel that it tells them nothing more about what's wrong with them and why it's happened. You will receive that diagnosis after tests to determine what has caused your neuropathic problems. Those tests will have produced inconclusive results and you will join roughly 4 out of 10 people for whom the cause of their neuropathy can't be established. However, that does not mean that your neuropathy is in any way 'lessened' by the word 'idiopathic' and your treatment will continue in much the same way as if your neuropathy had been found to have a clear cause. This short but useful article explains what idiopathic neuropathy actually means.



No You’re Not An Idiot if You Don’t’ Understand Idiopathic Neuropathy
Dr Marc Spitz Posted on September 2, 2013


Wow –we in the medical field use so BIG words. Maybe it’s to compensate for lack of understanding of certain aspects of peripheral neuropathy. There are areas of neuropathy in which we have a greater understanding. Diabetic neuropathy for example is quite clear as to the pathology causing peripheral neuropathy nerve disease. People with diabetes have high circulating blood glucose. Multiple studies have proven that high sugars are directly related to nerve damage. Diabetics have a high degree of propensity of developing neuropathy. It is estimated that over 50% of all diabetics will develop neuropathy in their life time.

With other causes neuropathy we are not so clear. There are over 20 causes of peripheral neuropathy-other than diabetes. Some include: adverse reaction to medication, including chemotherapy, alcoholism, injury, autoimmune disease, exposure to toxins and heavy medicals, injury, HIV/AIDS, nutritional deficiencies, and inherited diseases.

Yet-despite the fact there are so many causes of neuropathy, in many cases, we still do not the exact cause of neuropathy and its symptoms. The term for an unknown cause for neuropathy is called idiopathic neuropathy.

Idiopathic Polyneuropathy


Idiopathic sensory-motor polyneuropathy is an illness where sensory and motor nerves of the peripheral nervous system are affected and no obvious underlying etiology is found. In many respects, the symptoms are very similar to diabetic polyneuropathy.

Symptoms

In idiopathic sensory-motor polyneuropathy, the patients may experience unusual sensations (paresthesias), numbness and pain in their hands and feet. In addition, there may be weakness of the muscles in the feet and hands. As the disease progresses, patients may experience balance problems and have difficulty walking on uneven surfaces or in the dark. In a small minority of the patients, the autonomic nervous system may also be involved and the patients may experience persistent nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, incontinence, sweating abnormalities or sexual dysfunction.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis of idiopathic sensory-motor polyneuropathy is based on history, clinical examination and supporting laboratory investigations. These include electromyography with nerve conduction studies, skin biopsies to evaluate cutaneous nerve innervation, and nerve and muscle biopsies for histopathological evaluation.

Treatment

Treatment of idiopathic sensory-motor polyneuropathy depends on controlling neuropathic pain, which can be treated with anti-seizure medications, antidepressants, or analgesics including opiate drugs. Patients with balance problems often benefit from ‘gait’ training through physical therapy. Patients who have foot drop due to weakness in their ankles may benefit from orthotics.


http://www.footpaincenter.com/blog/?m=201309

Saturday, July 8, 2017

NEW GENE DISCOVERED THAT STOPS SPREAD OF CANCER


Scientists at the Salk Institute have identified a gene responsible for stopping the movement of cancer from the lungs to other parts of the body, indicating a new way to fight one of the world's deadliest cancers.

By identifying the cause of this metastasis -- which often happens quickly in lung cancer and results in a bleak survival rate -- Salk scientists are able to explain why some tumors are more prone to spreading than others. The newly discovered pathway, detailed today in Molecular Cell, may also help researchers understand and treat the spread of melanoma and cervical cancers.

"Lung cancer, even when it's discovered early, is often able to metastasize almost immediately and take hold throughout the body," says Reuben J. Shaw, Salk professor of molecular and cell biology and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute early career scientist. "The reason behind why some tumors do that and others don't has not been very well understood. Now, through this work, we are beginning to understand why some subsets of lung cancer are so invasive."

Lung cancer, which also affects nonsmokers, is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the country (estimated to be nearly 160,000 this year). The United States spends more than $12 billion on lung cancer treatments, according to the National Cancer Institute. Nevertheless, the survival rate for lung cancer is dismal: 80 percent of patients die within five years of diagnosis largely due to the disease's aggressive tendency to spread throughout the body.

To become mobile, cancer cells override cellular machinery that typically keeps cells rooted within their respective locations. Deviously, cancer can switch on and off molecular anchors protruding from the cell membrane (called focal adhesion complexes), preparing the cell for migration. This allows cancer cells to begin the processes to traverse the body through the bloodstream and take up residence in new organs.
In addition to different cancers being able to manipulate these anchors, it was also known that about a fifth of lung cancer cases are missing an anti-cancer gene called LKB1 (also known as STK11). Cancers missing LKB1 are often aggressive, rapidly spreading through the body. However, no one knew how LKB1 and focal adhesions were connected.

Now, the Salk team has found the connection and a new target for therapy: a little-known gene called DIXDC1. The researchers discovered that DIXDC1 receives instructions from LKB1 to go to focal adhesions and change their size and number.

When DIXDC1 is "turned on," half a dozen or so focal adhesions grow large and sticky, anchoring cells to their spot. When DIXDC1 is blocked or inactivated, focal adhesions become small and numerous, resulting in hundreds of small "hands" that pull the cell forward in response to extracellular cues. That increased tendency to be mobile aids in the escape from, for example, the lungs and allows tumor cells to survive travel through the bloodstream and dock at organs throughout the body.
"The communication between LKB1 and DIXDC1 is responsible for a 'stay-put' signal in cells," says first author and Ph.D. graduate student Jonathan Goodwin. "DIXDC1, which no one knew much about, turns out to be inhibited in cancer and metastasis."

Tumors, Shaw and collaborators found in the new research, have two ways to turn off this "stay-put" signal. One is by inhibiting DIXDC1 directly. The other way is by deleting LKB1, which then never sends the signal to DIXDC1 to move to the focal adhesions to anchor the cell. Given this, the scientists wondered if reactivating DIXDC1 could halt a cancer's metastasis. The team took metastatic cells, which had low levels of DIXDC1, and overexpressed the gene. The addition of DIXDC1 did indeed blunt the ability of these cells to be metastatic in vitro and in vivo.

"It was very, very surprising that this gene would be so powerful," says Goodwin. "At the start of this study, we had no idea DIXDC1 would be involved in metastasis. There are dozens of proteins that LKB1 affects; for a single one to control so much of this phenotype was not expected."
Right now, there is no specific treatment for cancers harboring LKB1 or DIXDC1 alterations, but those with a deletion of either gene would likely see results from cancer drugs that target the focal adhesions, says Shaw.

"The good news is that this finding predicts that patients missing either gene should be sensitive to new therapies targeting focal adhesion enzymes, which are currently being tested in early-stage clinical trials," says Shaw, who is also a member of the Moores Cancer Center and an adjunct professor at the University of California, San Diego.


"By identifying this unexpected connection between DIXDC1 and LKB1 in certain tumors, we have expanded the potential patient population that may be good candidates for these therapies," adds Goodwin.

Friday, July 7, 2017

GUT BACTERIA THAT PROTECT AGAINST FOOD ALLERGIES



The presence of Clostridia, a common class of gut bacteria, protects against food allergies, a new study in mice finds. By inducing immune responses that prevent food allergens from entering the bloodstream, Clostridia minimize allergen exposure and prevent sensitization -- a key step in the development of food allergies. The discovery points toward probiotic therapies for this so-far untreatable condition, report scientists from the University of Chicago, Aug 25 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Although the causes of food allergy -- a sometimes deadly immune response to certain foods -- are unknown, studies have hinted that modern hygienic or dietary practices may play a role by disturbing the body's natural bacterial composition. In recent years, food allergy rates among children have risen sharply -- increasing approximately 50 percent between 1997 and 2011 -- and studies have shown a correlation to antibiotic and antimicrobial use.

"Environmental stimuli such as antibiotic overuse, high fat diets, caesarean birth, removal of common pathogens and even formula feeding have affected the microbiota with which we've co-evolved," said study senior author Cathryn Nagler, PhD, Bunning Food Allergy Professor at the University of Chicago. "Our results suggest this could contribute to the increasing susceptibility to food allergies."
To test how gut bacteria affect food allergies, Nagler and her team investigated the response to food allergens in mice. They exposed germ-free mice (born and raised in sterile conditions to have no resident microorganisms) and mice treated with antibiotics as newborns (which significantly reduces gut bacteria) to peanut allergens. Both groups of mice displayed a strong immunological response, producing significantly higher levels of antibodies against peanut allergens than mice with normal gut bacteria.
This sensitization to food allergens could be reversed, however, by reintroducing a mix of Clostridia bacteria back into the mice. Reintroduction of another major group of intestinal bacteria, Bacteroides, failed to alleviate sensitization, indicating that Clostridia have a unique, protective role against food allergens.

Closing the door
To identify this protective mechanism, Nagler and her team studied cellular and molecular immune responses to bacteria in the gut. Genetic analysis revealed that Clostridia caused innate immune cells to produce high levels of interleukin-22 (IL-22), a signaling molecule known to decrease the permeability of the intestinal lining.

Antibiotic-treated mice were either given IL-22 or were colonized with Clostridia. When exposed to peanut allergens, mice in both conditions showed reduced allergen levels in their blood, compared to controls. Allergen levels significantly increased, however, after the mice were given antibodies that neutralized IL-22, indicating that Clostridia-induced IL-22 prevents allergens from entering the bloodstream.
"We've identified a bacterial population that protects against food allergen sensitization," Nagler said. "The first step in getting sensitized to a food allergen is for it to get into your blood and be presented to your immune system. The presence of these bacteria regulates that process." She cautions, however, that these findings likely apply at a population level, and that the cause-and-effect relationship in individuals requires further study.

While complex and largely undetermined factors such as genetics greatly affect whether individuals develop food allergies and how they manifest, the identification of a bacteria-induced barrier-protective response represents a new paradigm for preventing sensitization to food. Clostridia bacteria are common in humans and represent a clear target for potential therapeutics that prevent or treat food allergies. Nagler and her team are working to develop and test compositions that could be used for probiotic therapy and have filed a provisional patent.

"It's exciting because we know what the bacteria are; we have a way to intervene," Nagler said. "There are of course no guarantees, but this is absolutely testable as a therapeutic against a disease for which there's nothing. As a mom, I can imagine how frightening it must be to worry every time your child takes a bite of food."

"Food allergies affect 15 million Americans, including one in 13 children, who live with this potentially life-threatening disease that currently has no cure," said Mary Jane Marchisotto, senior vice president of research at Food Allergy Research & Education. "We have been pleased to support the research that has been conducted by Dr. Nagler and her colleagues at the University of Chicago."