Abstract

Electrophysiologic testing plays an important role in evaluating peripheral nerve, muscle, and neuromuscular junction diseases, aiding in diagnosis and treatment strategies by offering real-time assessment. Demyelination of peripheral nerves results in increased conduction delay, temporal dispersion, conduction block, and stimulation threshold. The localization or diffusion of these changes is crucial in understanding disease pathogenesis, necessitating stimulation at multiple points along nerve pathways. When axonal degeneration occurs, the amplitude is reduced, with mild conduction delay. Acute axonal degeneration may require 1 week to develop into Wallerian degeneration. During this time, conductivity was preserved in the nerve peripheral to the lesion. When MG or LEMS is suspected, repetitive nerve stimulation tests and single-fiber EMG are valuable for the diagnosis and pathophysiological evaluation. Notably, the latter is highly sensitive but not specific. Needle electromyography (EMG) assists in differentiating between myopathies and neurogenic diseases, and in determining whether the patient is in an acute or chronic stage. Integration of these tests contribute to an accurate diagnosis when considering the presenting symptoms.

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