(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Absent innervation of skin and sweat glands in congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis.
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Absent innervation of skin and sweat glands in congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis.

Clin Neurophysiol.  2000; 111(9):1596-601 (ISSN: 1388-2457)

Nolano M; Crisci C; Santoro L; Barbieri F; Casale R; Kennedy WR; Wendelschafer-Crabb G; Provitera V; Di Lorenzo N; Caruso G

OBJECTIVES: A case of a 10-year-old girl with congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (CIPA) is reported.

METHODS AND RESULTS: Parents referred several hyperpyretic episodes without sweating occurring since birth, and insensitivity to pain, noticed when the child was 2 years old. Her body had many bruises and scars, bone fractures and signs of self-mutilation. Neurological examination was normal except for insensitivity to pain. Her IQ was 52. Electrical and tactile sensory nerve conduction velocities were normal. The patient was unable to detect thermal stimuli. Histamine injection evoked a wheal but not a flare; pilocarpine by iontophoresis did not induce sweat. Microneurography showed neural activity from A-beta sensory fibers while nociceptive and skin sympathetic C fiber nerve activity was absent. No small myelinated fibers and very rare unmyelinated fibers were found in the sural nerve. Immunohistochemistry showed a lack of nerve fibers in the epidermis and only few hypotrophic and uninnervated sweat glands in the dermis.

CONCLUSIONS: The lack of innervation of the skin (C and A-delta fibers) appears to be the morphological basis of insensitivity to pain and anhidrosis, and is consistent with the loss of unmyelinated and small myelinated fibers in the sural nerve biopsy.

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    • PreMedline Identifier: 10964070
    From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

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