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Medline ® Abstracts for References 18,19

of 'Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy: Etiology, clinical features, and diagnosis'

18
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Multifocal demyelinating neuropathy with persistent conduction block.
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Lewis RA, Sumner AJ, Brown MJ, Asbury AK
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Neurology. 1982;32(9):958.
 
We describe five patients with a chronic asymmetric sensorimotor neuropathy most pronounced in the upper extremities with focal involvement of individual nerves. Diagnosis was established by electrophysiologic evidence of persistent multifocal conduction block. Sural nerve biopsy in three patients showed primarily demyelinating-remyelinating changes with varying degrees of fiber loss. Two patients had acute optic neuritis, indicating that the disorder was not always restricted to the peripheral nervous system. Two patients treated with corticosteroids improved, whereas three untreated patients had static deficits or steady progression of symptoms. Chronic multifocal demyelinating neuropathy with persistent conduction block seems to be a variant of chronic acquired demyelinating polyneuropathy and may be immunologically mediated.
AD
PMID
19
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Lewis-sumner syndrome of pure upper-limb onset: diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic features.
AU
Rajabally YA, Chavada G
SO
Muscle Nerve. 2009;39(2):206.
 
Lewis-Sumner syndrome (L-SS) represents the asymmetric variant of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP). The characteristics and specificities of L-SS of pure upper-limb onset, as initially described by Lewis et al. [Multifocal demyelinating neuropathy with persistent conduction block. Neurology 32:958-964, 1982], have not been studied. We describe 8 such patients and review 82 previously reported cases. Distal involvement predominates and is mixed, sensory and motor from onset in only 50% of patients. Pain is a feature in about 20%. Subsequent lower-limb involvement occurs in<40% of cases. Electrophysiologically, upper-limb-onset L-SS is characterized by the presence of motor conduction blocks in arm nerves in about 90% of cases, and other demyelinating motor abnormalities are significantly less frequent. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) protein levels are raised in about 40% of cases and are moderate in most. Mildly raised anti-GM1 antibody titers are rare (<5%), but very high titers (>or =1:6400) have not been reported. Over 80% of treated patients respond, and intravenous immunoglobulins may be more effective than steroids. The prognosis is favorable in 40% of patients who eventually stabilize without treatment. We also reviewed 36 cases of other forms of L-SS, and present a further 2 cases. The upper-limb-onset variant is significantly less likely to spread to other limbs and may be less likely to have raised CSF protein levels. This could reflect a more localized disease process in upper-limb-onset L-SS. This variant may represent a separate entity, to be distinguished from other asymmetric forms of CIDP.
AD
Neuromuscular Clinic, Department of Neurology, University Hospitals of Leicester, Leicester LE5 4PW, UK. yusuf.rajabally@uhl-tr.nhs.uk
PMID