Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy presenting as an acute brachial plexopathy: A lover's palsy

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Abstract

It is generally regarded that patients with hereditary neuropathy to pressure palsies, due to a deletion in the PMP22 gene, show recurrent pressure palsy and generalised peripheral neuropathy (pes cavus and hammer toes sometimes develop). Brachial plexopathy is rarely identified as a first presentation of hereditary neuropathy to pressure palsies. We describe a young man who developed a painless flail upper limb with a clinical diagnosis of a brachial plexopathy after his partner slept on his arm - a PMP22 deletion was found. His father, who had a symmetrical polyneuropathy without recurrent mononeuropathies, shared the PMP22 deletion.

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Wedderburn, S., Pateria, P., & Panegyres, P. K. (2014). Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy presenting as an acute brachial plexopathy: A lover’s palsy. Case Reports in Neurology, 6(3), 281–286. https://doi.org/10.1159/000369921

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