Fealey RD

Mayo Clinic in Arizona

2
EM Publications
52
h-index
(8,564 citations, 116 total works)

Research Topics

Cardiovascular Syncope and Autonomic Disorders (26) Sympathectomy and Hyperhidrosis Treatments (25) Genetic Neurodegenerative Diseases (19) Parkinson's Disease Mechanisms and Treatments (18) Heart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control (17)

Erythromelalgia Publications

Thermoregulation in neuropathies.

Fealey RD
Handbook of clinical neurology

Peripheral neuropathy affecting autonomic and small sensory fibers can cause abnormalities of both autonomic and behavioral thermoregulation. Quantitative autonomic and sensory neurophysiologic tests and quantification of the linear density of intraepidermal nerve fibers potentially can stratify those at risk of impaired thermoregulation during cold and heat challenges. New data relating to thermoregulatory sweating impairment in neuropathy are presented in this chapter. Of 516 neuropathy patients analyzed, 345 were found to have thermoregulatory sweat test (TST) abnormalities with a mean percentage of anterior body surface anhidrosis (TST%) of 12% and a significant reduction in total body sweat rate, although the rate of core temperature rise with heating (slope) was not significantly different from that of patients with a normal TST. However a subset of abnormal TST patients having 25% or greater TST% showed a significantly more rapid rise in core temperature (lower slope) than age- and sex-matched neuropathy patients with a normal TST. Etiologies of neuropathy in this more severe group included diabetes, erythromelalgia, immune-mediated autonomic neuropathy, primary systemic amyloidosis, and neuropathy associated with postganglionic-autonomic degenerative disorders.

Thermoregulatory sweat testing in patients with erythromelalgia.

Davis MD, Genebriera J, Sandroni P, Fealey RD
Archives of dermatology

To examine the results of thermoregulatory sweat testing in patients with erythromelalgia and to compare them with the results of other neurophysiologic tests of small-fiber nerve function. Retrospective study. Tertiary referral center. Thirty-two consecutive patients with erythromelalgia who had thermoregulatory sweat testing in addition to vascular and nerve testing. The following information was abstracted for each patient: demographics, clinical presentation, and results of thermoregulatory sweat testing, vascular (noninvasive) testing, and nerve testing (electromyography and autonomic reflex screen, including quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test). Results of thermoregulatory sweat testing to evaluate small-fiber neuropathy, compared with other tools used to estimate small-fiber neuropathy. Thermoregulatory sweat testing results were abnormal in 28 (88%) of 32 patients, and quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test results were abnormal in 22 patients (69%). Abnormalities noted on thermoregulatory sweat testing varied from local hypohidrosis or anhidrosis to global anhidrosis. Global or almost-global anhidrosis was present in 8 patients (25%); in 19 patients (59%) the anhidrosis was distal, and 1 other patient (3%) had a less specific pattern of anhidrosis (multifocal or regional). The area of anhidrosis generally corresponded to the area that was symptomatic of the erythromelalgia. Small-fiber neuropathy is prevalent in most patients with erythromelalgia. Thermoregulatory sweat testing is a sensitive and useful marker of small-fiber neuropathy in these patients.