Neuropediatrics, Table of Contents Neuropediatrics 1998; 29(3): 124-126DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-973547 Original articles © Hippokrates Verlag GmbH StuttgartImpaired Peripheral Somatosensory Function in Children with Prader-Willi SyndromeBrita Ryde Brandt1 , I. Rosén2 1Center of Child and Youth Habilitation, Lund, Sweden, 2Department of Clinical Neurophysiology, University Hospital, Lund, Sweden Recommend Article Abstract PDF Download(opens in new window) Buy Article(opens in new window) Abstract The Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is associated with a tendency to self-injury and a reduced sensitivity to painful stimuli. Somatosensory functions were studied in 5 children aged 11-13 years with PWS. Tactual perception in the hands (stereognosis) was apparently normal in 4 of them. Sensory nerve conduction velocities in the median nerve and latencies for sensory evoked potentials were similar in the PWS subjects and in 10 healthy controls indicating a preserved myelinisation of sensory nerve fibers in PWS. Sensory nerve action potential amplitudes in the PWS group were on an average only 40-50 % of normal size (p = 0.03), suggesting a reduced number of normal axons in the median nerve. The results may be relevant for the impaired pain sensitivity in PWS because similar neurographic findings and a low density of peripheral nerve fibers have been reported in patients with hereditary or congenital insensitivity to pain. Key words Prader-Willi syndrome - Somatosensory functions - Sensory nerve conduction velocities - Sensory nerve action amplitudes - Pain sensitivity - Self injury PDF (409 kb)