Subscribe to RSS
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-973547
© Hippokrates Verlag GmbH Stuttgart
Impaired Peripheral Somatosensory Function in Children with Prader-Willi Syndrome
Publication History
Publication Date:
12 March 2007 (online)


Abstract
The Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is associated with a tendency to self-injury and a reduced sensitivity to painful stimuli. Somatosensory functions were studied in 5 children aged 11-13 years with PWS. Tactual perception in the hands (stereognosis) was apparently normal in 4 of them. Sensory nerve conduction velocities in the median nerve and latencies for sensory evoked potentials were similar in the PWS subjects and in 10 healthy controls indicating a preserved myelinisation of sensory nerve fibers in PWS. Sensory nerve action potential amplitudes in the PWS group were on an average only 40-50 % of normal size (p = 0.03), suggesting a reduced number of normal axons in the median nerve. The results may be relevant for the impaired pain sensitivity in PWS because similar neurographic findings and a low density of peripheral nerve fibers have been reported in patients with hereditary or congenital insensitivity to pain.
Key words
Prader-Willi syndrome - Somatosensory functions - Sensory nerve conduction velocities - Sensory nerve action amplitudes - Pain sensitivity - Self injury