Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-17 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:18


Pericardial Tamponade Peripheral Neuropathies 1155

specific therapy
■consider balloon pericardiotomy or surgical drainage for recurrent
effusions
follow-up
■repeat echo after drainage
■during hospitalization, regularly assess for reaccumulation of effu-
sion

complications and prognosis
Complications
■death from untreated tamponade is most immediate complication
■complications of pericardiocentesis include pneumothorax, bleed-
ing, cardiac perforation

Prognosis
■largely depends on underlying etiology of pericardial effusion

PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHIES


MICHAEL J. AMINOFF, MD, DSc

history & physical
■Numbness, paresthesias, dysesthesias or hyperpathia
■Weakness, fasciculations or cramps of affected muscles
■Pain, often deep & burning, commonly present during rest
■Symptoms may be in distribution of single nerves (mononeuropa-
thy), multiple individual nerves (mononeuropathy multiplex) or dif-
fusely (polyneuropathy)
■May be family history of neuropathy
■May be history of systemic illness (eg, diabetes, uremia, AIDS,
vasculitis, connective tissue disease, malignancy, infections), toxin
exposure or use of medication assoc w/ neuropathy
■May be history of repetitive strain injury or recurrent trauma
■Distribution of deficit depends on nerves affected; depending on
type of neuropathy, may be motor, sensory or mixed deficit
■Motor: weakness, wasting or both in muscles supplied by affected
nerves
■Sensory: loss or impairment depending on nerve fibers affected,
in stocking-and-glove distribution (polyneuropathy) or territory of
individual nerves
Free download pdf