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1/29. Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy: review and a case report with dental implications.

    Hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN) is a rare syndrome which is seen in early childhood. Five different types are described. Absence of pain and self-mutilation are characteristic findings of this syndrome. Teeth in the oral cavity can cause damage to the oral tissues and tongue. When it is diagnosed, there should be co-operation between dentist and neurologist. Using an oral shield prevents the biting and, thus, traumatization of the tissues can be prevented. A case report which is diagnosed as HSAN type 4 is presented and information submitted about its treatment.
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2/29. Congenital indifference to pain.

    Congenital analgesia can vary from simple analgesia without any systemic dysfunction to more serious conditions associated with peripheral neuropathy, self-mutilation, and mental retardation. Prevention of injury is important for normal growth of the child.
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3/29. Multisystem involvement in congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (CIPA), a nerve growth factor receptor(Trk A)-related disorder.

    Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (CIPA), a rare autosomal recessive disorder, is characterized by insensitivity to pain, self-mutilating behaviour, anhidrosis and recurrent hyperpyrexia. It is a hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy, also classified as HSAN, due to a defect of the receptor for nerve growth factor. CIPA is the first human genetic disorder caused by a defect in the neurotrophin signal transduction system. This is the first clinical report of CIPA patients characterized on molecular grounds. The clinical phenotypes of our patients show that CIPA is characterized by a multisystem involvement besides the nervous system, including bone fracture with slow healing, immunologic abnormalities, such as low response to specific stimuli, chronic inflammatory state ending in systemic amyloidosis. The molecular characterization allows a better understanding of most of the clinical features.
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4/29. Congenital insensitivity to pain in four related Saudi families.

    Congenital insensitivity to pain (hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy [HSAN] type V) is a rare disorder of pain perception in which pain sensation is absent from birth, with no other neurologic deficits. We report five Saudi patients (three male and two female) age 10 months to 23 years who lacked pain sensation from birth but have normal appreciation of other sensory modalities. They are from four related families who are descended from one grandfather. The patients had sustained many painless injuries resulting in fractures and disfigurement, but otherwise are completely normal.
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5/29. Congenital sensory neuropathy with anhidrosis (hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV).

    Hereditary sensory neuropathies comprise a group of rare childhood diseases which are classified into four types. We present a Greek boy 11 years old with hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV (congenital sensory neuropathy with anhidrosis) whom we have followed up and studied during the last seven years. Our patient presented for the first time with recurrent hyperthermic episodes without sweating, and lack of pain sensation from the first months of life. Insensitivity to pain and thermal stimuli had resulted in burns on the extremities and self-mutilation of the tongue, lips and fingertips. When he was five and seven years old respectively he had two painless fractures of the ankles which led to insoluble orthopedic problems. He also suffered from mental retardation, which was obvious from his first years of life. Sweat gland investigations showed significant hypohidrosis or anhidrosis although the sweat glands were normal microscopically. Hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV, although rare, is important for dermatologists because it must be differentiated from other anhidrotic syndromes, and in view of the poor prognosis of the condition.
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6/29. Two brothers with a variant of hereditary sensory neuropathy.

    We report two brothers with the clinical symptoms and neuropathological findings of hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN) type IV but with normal sweating function and absence of recurrent fever. We propose that our patients may have a lower degree of expression of the genetic defect underlying HSAN type IV or that they represent a separate genetic entity.
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7/29. A mutation in the nerve growth factor beta gene (NGFB) causes loss of pain perception.

    Identification of genes associated with pain insensitivity syndromes can increase the understanding of the pathways involved in pain and contribute to the understanding of how sensory pathways relate to other neurological functions. In this report we describe the mapping and identification of the gene responsible for loss of deep pain perception in a large family from northern sweden. The loss of pain perception in this family is characterized by impairment in the sensing of deep pain and temperature but with normal mental abilities and with most other neurological responses intact. A severe reduction of unmyelinated nerve fibers and a moderate loss of thin myelinated nerve fibers are observed in the patients. Thus the cases in this study fall into the class of patients with loss of pain perception with underlying peripheral neuropathy. Clinically they best fit into HSAN V. Using a model of recessive inheritance we identified an 8.3 Mb region on chromosome 1p11.2-p13.2 shared by the affected individuals in the family. Analysis of functional candidate genes in the disease critical region revealed a mutation in the coding region of the nerve growth-factor beta (NGFB) gene specific for the disease haplotype. This NGF mutation seems to separate the effects of NGF involved in development of central nervous system functions such as mental abilities, from those involved in peripheral pain pathways. This mutation could therefore potentially provide an important tool to study different roles of NGF, and of pain control.
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keywords = neuropathy, deep
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8/29. tension-type headache as the unique pain experience of a patient with congenital insensitivity to pain.

    Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) is a rare clinical syndrome characterized by dramatic impairment of pain perception since birth and is generally caused by a hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN) with loss of the small-calibre, nociceptive nerve fibres. We report the case of a 32-year-old woman with CIP and a presumptive diagnosis of HSAN type V, who experienced physical pain for the first and unique time in her life shortly after the sudden loss of her brother. This patient had sustained innumerable painless injuries during childhood, including bone fractures and severe burns. The only pain she ever felt consisted in an intense headache, which took place in a context of strong emotional overload and anxiety, 3 weeks after her younger brother died suddenly in a car accident. The description of this inaugural episode of headache fulfilled the diagnostic criteria of episodic tension-type headache. This case strongly suggests that the transcription of the grief of bereavement into physical pain may sometimes occur independently of the peripheral mechanisms of nociception and despite the lack of previous pain experience. In the light of recent experimental data showing that the same neural mechanisms that regulate physical pain may also control the expression of separation distress and the feeling of social exclusion, this unique case helps to better understand why some patients may feel physically hurt after the loss of someone they love.
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keywords = neuropathy
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9/29. Congenital insensitivity to pain--review and report of a case with dental implications.

    Pain is a protective mechanism for the body. Absence of pain is a symptom in several disorders, both congenital and acquired. The congenital types are present at birth and affect the number and distribution of types of nerve fibers. At present, 5 types of hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies have been identified. The various disorders within this group are classified according to the different patterns of sensory and autonomic dysfunction and peripheral neuropathy and the presence of additional clinical features such as learning disability. However, the field is currently moving away from classification based on clinical presentation toward classification based on underlying genetic abnormality. In the absence of pain, patients are at risk of late presentation with illnesses or injuries, and have an increased incidence of traumatic injury. Self-mutilation is an almost invariable feature of these disorders. We report the case of a patient with congenital insensitivity to pain that presented with self-mutilation injuries to his hands and oral tissues caused by biting. The severe nature of these injuries necessitated serial extraction of his primary teeth soon after eruption, which led to a cessation of the problem. The mutilation has not returned following the eruption of the first of his permanent teeth, suggesting that he has learned not to bite himself, even though to do so causes him no discomfort.
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keywords = neuropathy
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10/29. Congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis: morphological and morphometrical studies on the skin and peripheral nerves.

    A rare case of congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis is presented. The male patient, who expired at 17 years of age, was noted insensitive to pain and bouts of unexplained fever at birth. He frequently fractured the hands and feet with secondary osteomyelitis. He did not sweat even in warm season. The intradermal nerve fibres and sweat glands were normal in distribution. The peripheral nerve seemed to be almost normal with light microscopy but the electron microscopical study revealed extreme paucity of unmyelinated fibers and a reduction of myelinated fibres, especially of small caliber. Abundant collagen fibrils comprised the endoneurium. There were no regenerative and/or degenerative changes of axons and myelin sheaths. The pathology of the peripheral nerve was considered to be congenital. Our case might belong to a category of congenital sensory neuropathy with anhidrosis (Pinsky and Di George 1966), congenital insensitivity to pain with anhidrosis (Gillespie and Perucca 1960) or hereditary sensory neuropathy type IV (Dyck and Ohta 1975, Goebel et al 1980).
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ranking = 0.4
keywords = neuropathy
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