
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Peripheral neuropathy is a highly prevalent and morbid condition affecting 2% to 7% of the population. Patients frequently experience pain and are at risk of falls, ulcerations, and amputations. It is most commonly occurs in patients with diabetes. For most cases, the diagnosis and treatment of neuropathy can be made without complex testing or referral to specialists. Drs. Eva Feldman and Brian Callaghan from the University of Michigan Department of Neurology, authors of Distal Symmetric Polyneuropathy and Electrodiagnostic Tests in Polyneuropathy and Radiculopathy, explain how to manage neuropathy.
By JAMA Network4.6
162162 ratings
Peripheral neuropathy is a highly prevalent and morbid condition affecting 2% to 7% of the population. Patients frequently experience pain and are at risk of falls, ulcerations, and amputations. It is most commonly occurs in patients with diabetes. For most cases, the diagnosis and treatment of neuropathy can be made without complex testing or referral to specialists. Drs. Eva Feldman and Brian Callaghan from the University of Michigan Department of Neurology, authors of Distal Symmetric Polyneuropathy and Electrodiagnostic Tests in Polyneuropathy and Radiculopathy, explain how to manage neuropathy.

38,430 Listeners

43,687 Listeners

27,011 Listeners

134 Listeners

321 Listeners

549 Listeners

701 Listeners

504 Listeners

6,467 Listeners

298 Listeners

264 Listeners

3,374 Listeners

21 Listeners

16 Listeners

8 Listeners

7 Listeners

19 Listeners

31 Listeners

94 Listeners

518 Listeners

367 Listeners

18 Listeners

375 Listeners