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Old 07-02-2013, 06:18 AM
glenntaj glenntaj is offline
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Queens, NY
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glenntaj glenntaj is offline
Magnate
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Queens, NY
Posts: 2,857
15 yr Member
Default While--

--the most common presentation of peripheral neuropathy is distal, in which the extremities farthest from the center of circulation are affected first and worst--often because many types of neuropathy, such as diabetic, involve circulation compromise to the nerves as a major part of the syndrome--there are plenty of neuropathies which affect many parts of the body (as Dr. Smith says, there can be symptoms anywhere there are nerves).

Often, the types with prominent proximal (head/face/body) symptoms are those with acute or sub-acute onset, and are nutritionally, toxic, or immune-mediated (these conditions tend to have more systemic presentations).

And yes, the language to describe the positive, "extra sensation" symptoms of neuropathy (as opposed to the negative, "reduced sensation" ones like numbness) is not always as precise as we'd like, as it involves sensations being produced without apparent extant stimuli. Burning, electrical jolting, feelings of some thing touching when nothing is there, hot and cold sensations, prickling, tingling, crawling, etc.--all have been used, and none of them seems completely adequate, notwithstanding that no two people have exactly the same symptoms and many have symptoms vary over time.

When I had the worst phases of my acute-onset body-wide small-fiber neuropathy (for which no cause was ever found, though autoimmune molecular mimicry process are suspected) I used to see imagine you got sun poisoning all over the body and then it was rubbed with steel wool. (There's an image.)
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wishuloveb (07-09-2013)