Nobody wish you didn't feel pain? Take it back right
now! Pain is a life-saving physical response to danger, and when people are
born with a rare genetic mutation that leaves them unable to feel pain,
they often die early deaths as a result of treatable injuries that they simply
fail to notice. It all starts in infancy, when babies born with pain
insensitivity bite off the tips of their tongues, break their bones without
making a fuss, and get corneal damage after neglecting to brush foreign objects
out of their eyes.
What is CIPA?
Congenital insensitivity to pain with
anhidrosis (CIPA) has two characteristic features: the inability to feel pain
and temperature, and decreased or absent sweating (anhidrosis). This condition
is also known as hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy type IV. The signs
and symptoms of CIPA appear early, usually at birth or during infancy, but with
careful medical attention, affected individuals can live into adulthood.
An inability to feel pain and temperature often leads to repeated severe
injuries. Unintentional self-injury is common in people with CIPA, typically by
biting the tongue, lips, or fingers, which may lead to spontaneous amputation
of the affected area. In addition, people with CIPA heal slowly from skin and
bone injuries. Repeated trauma can lead to chronic bone infections
(osteomyelitis) or a condition called Charcot joints, in which the bones and
tissue surrounding joints are destroyed.
Normally, sweating helps cool the body temperature. However, in people
with CIPA, anhidrosis often causes recurrent, extremely high fevers
(hyperpyrexia) and seizures brought on by high temperature (febrile seizures).
In addition to the characteristic features, there are other signs and
symptoms of CIPA. Many affected individuals have thick, leathery skin (lichenification)
on the palms of their hands or misshapen fingernails or toenails. They can also
have patches on their scalp where hair does not grow (hypotrichosis). About
half of people with CIPA show signs of hyperactivity or emotional instability,
and many affected individuals have intellectual disability. Some people with
CIPA have weak muscle tone (hypotonia) when they are young, but muscle strength
and tone become more normal as they get older.
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