“…Through very extensive and meticulous histological analyses, a few studies have reported results for the distal levels of the sural, peroneal, and tibial nerves and, importantly, also for defined proximal levels, including several serial sections of spinal nerves, the plexus, and the sciatic nerve at the thigh level 4, 6, 13. In these studies, Dyck et al,4 Sugimura and Dyck,13 and Johnson et al6 consistently showed that fiber loss at more proximal levels (eg, in the sciatic nerve at the thigh level) occurs not diffusely, but instead within focal and multifocal zones that appear “punched out” from the sciatic nerve fascicles, increasing in severity at more distal levels. This focal/multifocal lesion pattern on sciatic nerve cross‐sections at the thigh level closely resembled the focal/multifocal fiber loss observed after experimentally induced ischemic insults, for example, by microsphere embolization into vessels supplying the sciatic nerve18 or in human necrotizing vasculitic neuropathy 19.…”