Sensorimotor polyneuropathy
Alternate Names : Polyneuropathy - sensorimotor
Treatment
The goals of treatment include: - Finding the cause
- Controlling the symptoms
- Promoting a patient's self-care and independence
Treatment may include: - Changing medications (such as some treatments for HIV) if they are causing the problem
- Controlling blood sugar levels
- Not drinking alcohol
- Taking daily nutritional supplements
PROMOTING SELF-CARE AND INDEPENDENCE - Exercises and retraining
- Job (vocational) therapy
- Occupational therapy
- Orthopedic treatments
- Physical therapy
- Wheelchairs, braces, or splints
CONTROL OF SYMPTOMS Safety is an important consideration for people with neuropathy. Lack of muscle control and decreased sensation may increase the risk of falls or other injuries. If you have movement difficulties, consider the following safety measures: - Leave lights on.
- Remove obstacles (such as loose rugs that may slip on the floor).
- Test water temperature before bathing.
- Use railings.
- Wear protective shoes (such as those with closed toes and low heels).
Other tips include: - Check your feet (or other affected area) often for bruises, open skin areas, or other injuries, which you may not notice and can become infected.
- Check the inside of shoes often for grit or rough spots that may injure your feet.
- Visit a foot doctor (podiatrist) to reduce the risk of injury to your feet.
- Avoid leaning on your elbows, crossing your knees, or being in other positions that put prolonged pressure on certain body areas.
Medications used to treat this condition: - Over-the-counter and prescription pain relievers to control pain (neuralgia)
- Anticonvulsants (phenytoin, carbamazepine, neurontin) or tricyclic antidepressants to reduce stabbing pain
Avoid pain medication whenever possible, or use it only when necessary. Keeping your body in the proper position or keeping bed linens off a tender body part may help control pain.
Prognosis (Expectations)
You can fully recover from peripheral neuropathy if your health care provider can find the cause and successfully treat it, and if the damage does not affect the entire nerve cell. The amount of disability varies. Some people have no disability, while others have a partial or complete loss of movement, function, or feeling. Nerve pain may be uncomfortable and may last for a long time. Occasionally sensorimotor polyneuropathy causes severe, life-threatening symptoms.
Complications
- Deformity
- Difficulty swallowing
- Partial or total loss of movement or control over movement
- Partial or total loss of feeling
- Recurrent or unnoticed injury to any part of the body
Calling Your Health Care Provider
Call your health care provider if you have loss of movement or feeling in a part of your body. Early diagnosis and treatment increase the chance of controlling the symptoms.
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