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BMJ 2007;334 (2 June), doi:10.1136/bmj.39232.418403.43
Douglas Kamerow, US editor
dkamerow@bmj.com
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
This week's Practice section has a trio of interesting and useful articles.
Giuseppe Lauria and Raffaella Lombardi review recent advances in the use of skin biopsy to diagnose and monitor peripheral neuropathy (doi: 10.1136/bmj.39192.488125.BE). An easy to perform 3 mm punch biopsy can make the diagnosis of small nerve fiber neuropathies, which can be associated with diabetes and other metabolic disorders, sarcoidosis and other immune-mediated disorders, and viral and hereditary diseases. Commonly recommended nerve conduction studies only evaluate large myelinated fibers. Sural nerve biopsies, used to diagnose peripheral neuropathies, are invasive and sometimes dangerous procedures. Punch biopsy is worth thinking about in patientsespecially those with chronic diseaseswho complain of burning, prickling sensations or deep and aching foot pains.
In a 10-minute consultation on sinusitis, Neil Chadha and Rashmi Chadha emphasize that the diagnosis of rhinosinusitis is a clinical one, at least in primary care (doi: 10.1136/bmj.39161.557211.47). Characteristic signs
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