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Small Fiber Neuropathy: When Standard Tests Miss the Nerve Damage

Sandeep Dhanyamraju MD
Medically reviewed by Sandeep Dhanyamraju
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Sandeep Dhanyamraju MD
Medically reviewed by Sandeep Dhanyamraju

There is a frustrating pattern that plays out for many patients with small fiber neuropathy: burning pain in the feet, strange sensations in the hands, disrupted sleep, and after a complete neurological workup, including an EMG, every result comes back normal. For a long time, that was where the story ended. The condition went unlabeled, and patients were redirected toward fibromyalgia or anxiety as explanations for symptoms that were both real and neurological in origin.

Small nerve fiber neuropathy targets the thinnest, unmyelinated nerve fibers in the peripheral nervous system, precisely the ones that standard electrodiagnostic testing cannot measure. That single gap in the diagnostic toolkit explains years of missed diagnoses and is the essential starting point for understanding what an accurate workup actually requires.

What Small Fiber Neuropathy Is

To understand why this condition consistently escapes standard testing, it helps to know how peripheral nerves are classified. Large myelinated fibers carry vibration, proprioception, and motor signals, and these are the fibers that EMG and nerve conduction studies are designed to evaluate. Small fiber peripheral neuropathy affects a distinct set of fibers: the thin A-delta fibers and unmyelinated C fibers that mediate pain, temperature sensation, and autonomic regulation throughout the body.

When these fibers are damaged, the body loses accuracy in processing pain and temperature, struggles to regulate sweating and blood pressure, and develops sensory disruption at the level of the skin’s nerve endings. A patient can have significant, disabling symptoms. At the same time, their standard test results remain entirely normal, which is precisely what makes small nerve fiber neuropathy so consistently difficult to identify without the right diagnostic approach.

Symptoms and How They Present

The small fiber neuropathy symptoms that drive most patients to seek evaluation tend to center on the feet and hands, and they are characteristically worse at night when competing stimuli no longer blunt the pain signal. Burning, stabbing, or electric shock-like sensations are the most frequently reported complaints, and many patients describe a sensitivity where light touch, clothing, or bedsheets become genuinely uncomfortable.

Common symptoms of small fiber neuropathy include:

  • Burning or stabbing pain in the feet and lower legs, often described as walking on hot coals
  • Heightened sensitivity to touch or temperature changes in affected areas
  • Pins-and-needles or electric sensations that intensify at rest, particularly during nighttime hours

Autonomic involvement is more common than most patients expect. Dry eyes, dry mouth, abnormal sweating, lightheadedness on standing, and slowed digestion related to autonomic nerve involvement can accompany the sensory symptoms and, in some cases, precede them by months.

What Causes Small Fiber Nerve Damage

Small fiber neuropathy causes a wide spectrum, and identifying the underlying driver shapes every treatment decision that follows. The most common identifiable cause is metabolic: diabetic neuropathy and even prediabetes can damage small fibers before glucose levels are severe enough to affect the large fibers that show up on standard testing. Autoimmune conditions, including Sjögren’s syndrome, lupus, and celiac disease, represent another significant category, alongside thyroid dysfunction, vitamin B12 deficiency, and chronic infections such as hepatitis C and HIV.

In roughly half of all confirmed cases, no cause is identified despite thorough evaluation, leading to a presentation classified as idiopathic. Genetic contributors, including Fabry disease and SCN9A mutations, account for a meaningful subset of those idiopathic cases and are increasingly recognized as broader genetic testing becomes accessible in routine clinical practice.

Why Standard Nerve Tests Come Back Normal

How-Neurologists

EMG and nerve conduction studies have real value for many presentations of nerve damage, but small fiber neuropathy poses a structural limitation. These tests measure electrical conduction through large, myelinated fibers, and small fibers are too thin to generate a detectable signal. An entirely abnormal small fiber population can therefore coexist with a perfectly normal EMG result.

This diagnostic gap carries real consequences for patients. When burning pain and altered temperature perception coexist with normal test results, the clinical default in many settings has been to reclassify symptoms rather than expand the workup. Misdiagnoses of fibromyalgia, anxiety, or psychosomatic pain are common as a result, sometimes persisting for years before a more targeted evaluation is eventually ordered.

How Neurologists Diagnose Small Fiber Neuropathy

Accurate diagnosis requires tools specifically designed for small fibers. The gold standard is a skin punch biopsy, a minimally invasive procedure where small tissue samples from the lower leg are analyzed under microscopy to measure intraepidermal nerve fiber density. A significantly reduced density compared to age-matched norms confirms the presence of small fiber neuropathy, even when all prior testing was unremarkable.

Additional tools used alongside biopsy include:

  • Quantitative sensory testing (QST), which measures detection thresholds for heat, cold, and vibration
  • Autonomic function testing, including tilt table testing and QSART, to assess sweat gland response
  • Blood work targeting treatable causes: glucose tolerance, B12, thyroid function, and inflammatory markers

These specialized diagnostic procedures are what distinguish a complete small fiber workup from the standard evaluation that routinely misses the diagnosis.

Treatment Options

Small fiber neuropathy treatment follows two parallel tracks: addressing the underlying cause when it is identified and managing symptoms throughout the process.

When a treatable cause is identified, targeting it often stabilizes the condition and, occasionally, produces partial recovery of nerve function. Glucose control in patients with diabetic neuropathy, B12 supplementation, and immunotherapy for autoimmune-driven cases can all meaningfully slow progression. For autoimmune small fiber neuropathy specifically, intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) has shown measurable improvement in intraepidermal nerve fiber density in clinical studies, representing one of the better-supported interventions currently available.

For symptom management, gabapentin, pregabalin, and duloxetine are most commonly prescribed, working by modulating pain signaling centrally. Topical lidocaine and high-concentration capsaicin patches offer localized relief without significant systemic effects. As a new treatment for small fiber neuropathy, low-dose naltrexone has attracted clinical attention for its anti-inflammatory mechanisms on peripheral nerves, with promising early data, though the evidence base continues to develop across centers.

Prognosis and Living with Small Fiber Neuropathy

Small fiber neuropathy life expectancy is not shortened by the condition itself, a point worth stating directly for patients who’ve been carrying that concern. The underlying cause holds the more meaningful long-term implications: uncontrolled diabetes and active autoimmune disease carry consequences that extend well beyond neuropathy, which is why finding and managing them matters on multiple levels.

Outcomes vary considerably across patients. Some stabilize once the underlying driver is controlled; others improve with targeted treatment; a smaller group sees slow progression over the years despite management. Practical strategies that consistently support quality of life include protecting insensate feet from undetected injuries, staying physically active within pain tolerance, and managing the nighttime sleep disruption that this condition characteristically worsens. Regular follow-up appointments are what allow changes in the small fiber neuropathy life expectancy trajectory to be caught and addressed before significant further nerve loss occurs.

When to Ask Your Neurologist About Small Fiber Testing

Small-fiber neuropathy symptoms warrant a dedicated workup when standard testing hasn’t provided an explanation that fits the clinical picture. The scenarios that most specifically point toward small fiber evaluation are:

  • Burning or stabbing pain in the feet or hands with a normal EMG result
  • A fibromyalgia diagnosis made without skin biopsy or autonomic testing
  • Sensory complaints accompanied by autonomic symptoms such as positional dizziness or unexplained changes in sweating

At Lone Star Neurology, skin punch biopsy and autonomic testing are available across our 18 DFW locations. If you’ve been told your tests are normal while your symptoms persist, asking specifically about small fiber testing at your next appointment is the right next step.

FAQ

Can small fiber neuropathy be reversed? 

Partial recovery is possible when a treatable cause is identified and managed. Patients with autoimmune-driven cases who respond to IVIG, or those with B12 deficiency treated promptly, sometimes show improved intraepidermal nerve fiber density on follow-up biopsy. Idiopathic cases are less predictable, though stabilization is achievable for many patients with appropriate management.

Does small fiber neuropathy show up on a standard nerve test?

It does not. EMG and nerve conduction studies test only large myelinated fibers, producing no signal from small-fiber damage. A normal EMG does not rule out this condition, which is why patients with characteristic small-fiber neuropathy symptoms should specifically ask about a skin biopsy rather than treating a normal electrodiagnostic result as the final word on their nerve health.

Is small fiber neuropathy the same as fibromyalgia?

They are not in the same condition. Small fiber neuropathy involves measurable structural damage to peripheral nerves confirmed on biopsy, while fibromyalgia is a central sensitization disorder. A meaningful number of patients carrying fibromyalgia diagnoses have been found, on further workup, to have small fiber peripheral neuropathy as the underlying explanation for their pain.

Does small fiber neuropathy affect life expectancy?

Neuropathy itself does not shorten life. The underlying cause, if left unmanaged, carries the more significant long-term risk, which is why identifying and treating it matters well beyond nerve protection alone.

What kind of doctor diagnoses small fiber neuropathy?

A neurologist with experience in peripheral neuropathy and access to skin biopsy and autonomic function testing. These tools require clinical context to interpret accurately, and a specialist evaluation typically produces faster, more actionable answers than a general workup alone.

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Edward Medina
15:34 30 Jun 22
Just such an amazing staff that makes you feel like part of their family. I’ve been going there for over 5 years now and each visit I get the very best care and treatments that I have ever received in the 20+ years that I’ve been dealing with severe debilitating migraines. Since i started seeing them the number of my migraines has dropped from 15-20 a month to 2-3 every 3 month. I highly recommend them …they will change your life!
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Daneisha Johnson
22:20 19 May 22
Dr. Askari was very kind and explained everything so I could understand. The other staff were nice as well. I would have gave 5 stars but I was a little taken aback when I checked in and had to pay 600.00 upfront. I think that should have been discussed in a appointment confirmation call or email just so I could have been prepared.
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Jean Cooper
16:54 29 Apr 22
I love the office staff they are friendly and very helpful. Dr. JODIE is very caring and understanding to your needs and wants to help you. I will go back. would recommend Dr. Dr. Jodie to other Patients in a heart beat. The team works well together.
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Linda M
19:40 02 Apr 22
I was obviously stressed, needing to see a neurologist. The staff was so patient and Dr. Ansari was so kind. At one point he told me to relax, we have time, when I was relaying my history of my condition. That helped ease my stress. I have seen 3 other neurologists and he was the only one who performed any assessment tests on my cognitive and physical skills. At one point I couldn't complete two assessments and got upset and cried. I was told, it's OK. That's why you're here. I was truly impressed, and super pleased with the whole experience!
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Leslie Durham
15:05 01 Apr 22
I've been coming here for about 5 years. The staff are ALWAYS friendly and knowledgeable. The Doctors are the absolute best!! Jodie Moore is always in such a great mood which is a plus when you are already stressed. Highly recommended
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Monica Del Bosque
14:13 25 Mar 22
Since my first post my thoughts have changed here. It's unfortunate. My doctor and PA were great, but the office staff is horrible. They never call you back when they say they will, they misinform you, they cause you too much stress wondering what's going on, they don't keep you posted. They never answer the phone. At this point I've left four messages in the last week, and I have sent three messages. Twice from their portal and one direct email. No response. My appointment is on Monday morning at 8:30am, no confirmation on my insurance and what's going on. What the heck is going on, this is ridiculous!

I've given up... the stress her office staff has put me through is just not worth it. You can do so much better, please clean house, either change out your office staff, or find a way for them to be more efficient please. You have to do something. This is not how you want to run your practice. It leaves a very bad impression on your business.
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Ron Buckholz
23:32 23 Mar 22
I was actually pleasantly surprised with this visit! It took me a long time to get the appointment scheduled because no one answers your phones EVER! After a month, I finally got in, and your staff was warm, friendly, and I was totally impressed! I feel like you will take care of my needs!
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Steve Nabavi
16:28 16 Mar 22
It was a nice visit. Happy staff doing all they can do to comfort the patients in a very calming environment. You ask me they are earned a big gold star on the fridge. My only complaint they didn't give me any cookies.
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Katie Lewis
16:10 10 Feb 22
Had very positive appointments with Jodie and Dr. Sheth for my migraine care. Jodie was so fast with the injections and has so much valuable info. I started to feel light headed during checkout and the staff was SO helpful—giving me a chair, water, and taking me into a private room until I felt better. Highly recommend this practice for migraine patients, they know what they’re doing!!
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Joshua Martinez
16:02 10 Dec 21
I was scheduled to be checked and just want to say that the staff was fantastic. They were kind and helpful. I was asked many questions related to what was going on and not once did I feel as though I was being brushed off. The front desk staff was especially great in assisting me. I'm scheduled to go back for a mri and am glad that I'll be going there.
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Isabel Ivy
21:42 03 Nov 21
I had such a good experience with Lone Star Neurology, Brent my MRI Tech was so awesome and made sure I was very comfortable during the appointment. He gave me ear plugs, a pillow, leg support and blanket, easiest MRI ever lol 🤣 My 72 hour EEG nurse Amanda was also so awesome. She made sure I was take care of over the 3 days and took her time with the electrodes to make sure it was comfortable for me! Paige was also a huge help in answering all my questions when it came to my test results, and letting me know her honest opinions about how I should go forth with my treatment.
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Leslie Luce
17:37 20 Oct 21
The professionalism and want to help attitude of this office was present from the moment I contacted them. The follow up and follow through as well as their willingness to find a way to schedule my dad was above and beyond. We visited two offices in the same day with the same experience. I am appreciative of this—we spend a lot of time with doctors and this was top notch start to finish.
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robert Parker
16:38 16 Apr 21
I love going to this office. The staff is friendly and helpful. The doctor is great. I am getting the best neurological tests and treatment I have ever had. The only reason I did not give them a 5 star rating is because it is impossible to reach a live person at the office to reschedule appointments. Every time I have tried to get through to the office it says all people are busy and I am sent to a voicemail. If they could get their phone answering fixed, I would give them a strong 5 stars.
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MaryAnn Hornbaker
00:26 25 Feb 21
Dr. Harney is an excellent Dr. I found him friendly , personable and thorough. I evidently am an unusual case. Therefore he spent a Hugh amount of time educating me. He even gave me literature to further explain my condition and how to follow up. This is something you rarely get from your doctors. So I am more than please with my doctor and his staff.
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Roger Arguello
03:05 29 Jan 21
Always courteous, professional. The staff is very friendly and always work with you to find the best appointment time. The care team has been great. Always taking the time to listen to your concerns and to find the best treatment.
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Margaret Rowland
01:12 27 Jan 21
I have been a patient at Lone Star Neurology for several years. Now both my adult daughters also are patients there. I love Jodie. She is always so prompt whether it is a teleamed call are a visit in the office. She takes the time to explain everything to me and answers all my questions. I am so blessed to have Jodie as my doctor.
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Susan Miller
03:01 13 Jan 21
My husband had an accident 5 years ago and Lone Star Neurology has been such a blessing to us with my husbands care. Jodie Moore is his provider and she is amazing! Jodie is very knowledgeable, caring, and thorough. She takes her time with you, making sure your needs are met and she is happy to answer any questions you may have. Lone Star Neurology’s patients are very lucky to have Jodie providing their care. Thank you Lone Star Neurology and especially Jodie for everything you have done for us. Jodie, you are the best!
Windalyn C profile picture
Windalyn C
01:32 09 Jan 21
Jodie is wonderful. She is very caring and knowledgeable. I have been to over a dozen neurologists, and none were able to help me as much as they have here. Thanks!
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Katie Kordel
00:40 09 Jan 21
Jodi Moore, nurse practitioner, is amazing. I have suffered from frequent, debilitating headaches for almost 20 years. She has provided the best proactive and responsive care I have ever received. My quality of life has been greatly improved by her caring approach and tenacity in finding solutions.
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Ellie Natsis
15:41 07 Jan 21
I have had the best experience at this neurologist's office! For over a year I have been receiving iv treatments here each month and my nurse, Bobbie is beyond wonderful!! She's so attentive, knowledgeable, caring, and detail oriented. She makes an otherwise uncomfortable experience much more pleasant and definitely puts me at ease! She also helps me with my insurance,ordering this specialty medication and dealing with the ordering process which is no easy feat.Needless to say, she goes above a beyond in every way and I'm so grateful to this office and to Bobbie for all they do for me!
Matt Morris profile picture
Matt Morris
15:39 07 Jan 21
Let me start by saying that I have been coming here for years. Due to my autoimmune disease, I am in this office once every three weeks for multiple hours at a time. The office is very clean and the staff very friendly. My only complaint would be there communication via phone. They aren't the best at responding if you leave a voicemail and expect a call back. I understand that this is prob just due to the sheer number of alls they receive daily. What I can say I like the best about the office are the people. Bobby who handles my infusions is great. I never have any issues with her setting up my infusions. She is very quick to reply to messages sent via text and if she were to leave then my whole opinion of the office may change. I also enjoy people like Matt, Lauren, and Jodi. I appreciate all that they do for me and without this team I'm not sure I would be as happy as I am to visit the office as frequently as I have to. Please ensure that these folks are recognized as they are what makes my visit to this office so tolerable :).
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