Seventeen children with pediatric peroneal mononeuropathies evaluated between 1979 and 1991 are reported. Twelve boys and 5 girls, ranging in age from 1.5 months to 17 years, were referred for footdrop in 16 children (94%) or for lower extremity pain in 1 child (6%). Causes included compression in 10 children (59%), trauma in 3 children (18%), entrapment in 3 children (18%), and indeterminate in 1 child (5%). Based on nerve conduction studies and electromyography, the level of the pediatric peroneal mononeuropathic lesion was the common peroneal nerve in 10 children (59%), the deep peroneal nerve in 2 children (12%), and the superficial peroneal nerve in 1 child (5%). In 4 other children (24%), pediatric peroneal mononeuropathy at the knee was not more precisely identified. Surgical exploration in 3 children with progressive pediatric peroneal mononeuropathy was valuable. Improvement occurred in 13 of 17 children (76%).
Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNLPP) is a peripheral nerve disorder in which recurrent pressure palsies are associated with pathological swelling (‘tomacula’) of myelinated nerve internodes. We report a patient with a slowly progressive polyneuropathy associated with substantial slowing of conduction velocities initially suggestive of an acquired or hereditary demyelinating polyneuropathy. However, repeat electrodiagnostic studies demonstrated that conduction slowing and partial conduction block were localized primarily to common sites of nerve compression and entrapment. Sural nerve biopsy revealed multiple tomacula consistent with the diagnosis of HNLPP.
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