Children CIDP
By CIDPUSA.ORG,
Sat, 31 May 2010 17:55:07
CIDPUSA
Child cidp
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PMID: 9040714 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Diabetes Metab. 2001 Apr;27(2 Pt 1):155-8.
An unusual neuropathy in a diabetic patient: evidence for
intravenous immunoglobin-induced effective therapy.
Romedenne P,.
-St Joseph Medical Center, Mons, Belgium.
We report the case of a 68-year old type-2 diabetic male patient who was admitted to hospital for progressive weakness in the right lower
limb. Although his metabolic control was good, he lost more than 20 kg of weight. Despite intensive physio- and vitaminotherapy, his neurological condition kept on degrading with a severe amyotrophy and pain of the right thigh. He was unable to walk and to stand alone. Besides a yet known sensitive polyneuropathy, the electrophysiological study signs of demyelination and axonal
degeneration. Combined with the albuminocytologic dissociation observed in the cerebrospinal fluid, a diagnosis of inflammatory neuropathy was diagnosed. The patient underwent a treatment by methylprednisolone andwith immunoglobins a striking improvement of his neurological condition. This case report illustrates that rare forms of neuropathy such as inflammatory neuropathies close to chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) can occur
in diabetic patients and superimpose on the more commonly described forms of neuropathies. It recalls the importance of inflammatory neuropathies are perfectly curable.
Neurol Sci. 2000 Feb 15;173(2):129-39.
(the following study shows that AAN guidelines for CIDP fail to help
in diagnosing patients)
The spectrum of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy.
Rotta FT, Sussman AT, Bradley
Department of Neurology, University of Miami School of Medicine,
Research criteria for the diagnosis of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) were proposed by committee of the American Academy of Neurology (AAN) in 1991, and since then these criteria have been widely used in clinical studies. We have been impressed by the frequent finding of electrophysiological changes of a demyelinating neuropathy in patients whose clinical presentation does not conform to the usually accepted clinical phenotype of CIDP.
In our study the clinical spectrum
of CIDP, Forty-seven patients (54%) had distinct features outside the usual clinical presentation of CIDP. Of these,
15 (17%) had predominantly distal features, 13 (15%) had exclusively sensory polyneuropathy; seven (8%) had markedly
asymmetric disease, seven (8%) had associated CNS demyelination, four (5%) had predominant cranial nerve involvement,
and one (1%) had only the restless legs syndrome. An associated medical condition that may have been responsible for the
acquired demyelinating neuropathy was present in 60% of the patients. We conclude that spectrum of CIDP is broader than
would be indicated by the strict application of the AAN research criteria, and that many of the cases meeting more liberal criteria
frequently respond to immunosuppressive therapy.
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