51 year old male , with swelling , foot drop and loss of sensation in the left foot

CHIEF COMPLAINTS 

This is the case of a 51-year-old male, farmer by occupation, who presented to the hospital today with chief complaints of 

  • Swelling in the left foot from the past 3 years 
  • Progressive loss of sensations in the left foot from 3 years 
  • Ulcer in the dorsum of the left foot from the past 11 months 
HISTORY OF PRESENTING ILLNESS 

the patient was apparently asymptomatic 25 years ago 

25 years ago the patient was playing football and accidentally his left foot went into a ditch which lead to diffuse swelling in his left foot up to the ankle joint 

 The swelling lasted one week, it was associated with Pain and was not associated with fever, change of colour of the overlying skin or loss of body weight.

The pain associated with the swelling was continuous, localised to the left foot below the level of the ankle joint. 

The patient was unable to walk, and thus visited a doctor who prescribed him medication for a week, after which the swelling and pain resolved.  

3 years ago, while going for a morning walk, the patient accidentally placed the same foot into a ditch and it got twisted. Immediately after, the patient experienced swelling in the left foot,  predominantly in the lateral aspect of the dorsum of the foot.  
The swelling was associated with Pain and not associated with any change in body weight, fever or change in colour of the overlying skin. 

The patient visited a doctor and an X-Ray of the left foot was done, which depicted a crack on the lateral aspect of the plantar of the foot. The patient was advised to undergo surgery, but he didn't and thus continued taking prescribed medication for the next nine months. The patient could walk with a limp. The swelling did not completely subside 

A week later, the patient experienced a tingling sensation in the little toe which progressed medially towards the great toe and the patient was unable to flex the great toe towards the dorsum. Later the patient could not flex the foot towards the dorsum. The patient complains that while wearing his slippers, the slippers keep coming off his feet. 

11 months ago, the patient developed an ulcer in the lateral aspect of the plantar of the left foot. The patient did not initially notice the ulcer as there was a loss of sensation present at the time. When the patient first noticed the ulcer, it was 1-2 cm in size, on visiting the doctor, the patient was given cadexomer iodine  ointment - that did not provide any relief, later in addition to the ointment, the patient was given oral medications, which have been effective in reducing the size of the ulcer. The ulcer is still present. 

Past history 
The patient is not a known case of DM, HTN, TB, Asthma, epilepsy 

Family History 
Mother - Breathing difficulty 
Father - High blood pressure 


Occupation 
The patient is a farmer by occupation and works in rice and jute fields. 

Personal History 

diet - Normal 
sleep - normal 
appetite - normal 
Addictions: chronic smoker for the past 15 years, patient finishes one 10-gram packet in 3 days 
No history of allergies 
Bowel and bladder movements normal 

Drug history

The patient is currently taking 


Previous investigations 

6 months ago 





Previous Imaging 

X-Ray- Foot

3 years ago



MRI- lumbosacral spine - 6 MONTHS AGO 

















General examination 

The patient is conscious coherent, oriented to time place and person. 

The patient is well built and well nourished. 

Absence of pallor icterus cyanosis clubbing koilonychia lymphadenopathy and edema. 






Swelling



Ulcer 



CNS examination

The patient is conscious , coherent, oriented to time place and person . 

Cranial nerve examination- normal 

Sensory nervous system
Absent of pain and fine touch in left foot upto the ankle joint . 

Right lower limb sensations normal 


Motor system 
                    Right , left 
Triceps.      Present , present 
Biceps.        Present , Present 
Brachioradial Present, Present 
Knee joint.   Present , Present 
Ankle joint  Present , Present 


Equine gait 
 



Day 1 investigations 





Orthopedic consult 






Day 2 Investigations 





Nerve conduction studies 








MRI














Provisional Diagnosis - 

? Nerve sheath tumor 
? Mononeuropathy 

Treatment

Gabapentin 100 mg thrice daily 
Meaxon afternoon 

Case discussion 

Discussion 1 Are you sure it's common peroneal and not distal to that?
 The patient's clinical signs suggest he has got good power in calf muscles as well as sensation over it's dermatome? 
Which nerve supplies there?
 And which nerve supplies till the dorsum which is the most affected?


 Answers : 
Sir the calf muscles are being supplied by the tibial nerve and the patient is able to plantarflex . The major part of the sensory supply of dorsum is supplied by the superficial peroneal nerve ( branch of common peroneal) . The sensory supply of the foot also involve other nerves like Sural nerve , Saphenous nerve and distal branches of the Tibial nerve in the plantar aspect .He is not able to dorsiflex due to the involvement of the deep peroneal nerves .


Sir since there is no sensation in the entirety of the foot , could this be a polyneuropathy ?


Peroneal Neuropathies

Disease involving the common PERONEAL NERVE or its branches, the deep and superficial peroneal nerves. Lesions of the deep peroneal nerve are associated with PARALYSIS of dorsiflexion of the ankle and toes and loss of sensation from the web space between the first and second toe. Lesions of the superficial peroneal nerve result in weakness or paralysis of the peroneal muscles (which evert the foot) and loss of sensation over the dorsal and lateral surface of the leg.

Tibial Neuropathy

Clinical features include PARALYSIS of plantar flexion, ankle inversion and toe flexion as well as loss of sensation over the sole of the foot. (From Joynt, Clinical Neurology, 1995, Ch51, p32)

Year introduced: 2000


Suggestive of deep peroneal nerve involvement -
-Absence of dorsiflexion 
-loss of sensation in first web space 

Suggestive of tibial involvement-
Loss of sensation over sole of foot




Discussion 2 . 

Here for this patient, let me begin by asking this basic STEM question :

What is wallerian degeneration and how is it related to infective or any other inflammatory injury including trauma? 

How are neurodegenerative disorders different in terms of their neuronal degeneration?


Answer 2. 


The characteristics of an efficient innate-immune response are rapid onset and conclusion, and the orchestrated interplay between Schwann cells, fibroblasts, macrophages, endothelial cells, and molecules they produce. Wallerian degeneration serves as a prelude for successful repair when these requirements are met. In contrast, functional recovery is poor when injury fails to produce the efficient innate-immune response of Wallerian degeneration.

Discussion  3 

 Can you share the examination findings reflecting the current physiological functioning of his left common peroneal and tibial nerve in this patient? 


 Suggestive of tibial nerve involvement

1. Loss of sensation over sole of foot

Suggestive of deep peroneal nerve involvement 

1. Absence of dorsifelxion of ankle 
2. Loss of sensation from first web space between first and second toe 

Suggestive of superficial peroneal nerve involvement 

1. Inability to evert the foot
2.Loss of sensation over dorsum of foot 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/68020427
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/68020429


 So involvement of tibial is only sensory while the involvement of common peroneal is motor sensory?


: Sir the ankle reflex is present and he is able to plantar flex , hence the motor component of the tibial nerve supplying the calf muscles is not involved .


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