Serious Symptoms Of Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyneuropathy (CIDP)

Other Abnormal Sensations

Dreamstime

An individual may feel other abnormal sensations or experience paresthesia when affected by chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. Affected individuals sometimes describe these abnormal sensations like the feeling of pins and needles in the affected part of the body. This sensation is the same type of feeling that occurs when a healthy individual sits on top of their foot for an extended period. Other sensations reported in CIDP patients include achiness or burning pain. Some individuals explain this sensation to be a form of itchiness or prickling. These abnormal sensations may occur in individuals with CIDP on a constant or intermittent basis depending on the severity of their illness. These abnormal sensations may radiate from one spot out to other regions. The presence and extent of abnormal sensations in an individual affected by CIDP is dependent on how much damage the myelin sheathing around their nerves has sustained. The poor conduction of impulses or the partial conduction of impulses due to the absence of the myelin sheath causes a patient to feel abnormal sensations.

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