The article presents a case of acute uremic neuropathy. Without any visible cause, a 71-year-old patient felt weakness in legs and numbness in feet. Her neurological status assessment on admission to the hospital showed peripheral tetraparesis and impaired sensitivity of the polyneuropathic type. Neurological symptoms appeared due to renal dysfunction, which had been confi rmed with laboratory test. Electroneuromyography revealed signs of acute demyelinating polyneuropathy. Аt the hospital, the patient was diagnosed Alzheimer’s disease. The treatment provided at the hospital led to normalization of her laboratory parameters and complete restoration of motor functions. The peculiarity of the presented clinical case is that the patient started violating drinking regime due to her cognitive impairment which resulted in renal dysfunction and acute uremic neuropathy. The other peculiarity of the case is that it was enough to correct the water-electrolyte disorders to fully restore the patient’s motor functions within a month, without the use of dialysis. Finally, the article discusses the issue of pathogenesis and diff erential diagnosis of other types of polyneuropathies.
The increase in the number and life expectancy of patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) worldwide determines the high prevalence of late complications of diabetes, including diabetic polyneuropathy (DPN), the most common type of polyneuropathy. Oxidative stress is considered the main reason for the cellular pathology development in diabetes mellitus, which determines the use of antioxidants for the DPN treatment. Alpha-lipoic acid (ALA), a natural fat-soluble antioxidant, is the most effective drug for reducing DPN symptoms. Furthermore, the symptom-modifying effect of ALA has been shown in numerous randomized controlled trials. The article discusses the possible disease-modifying effect of ALA.
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