[Chronic polyradiculoneuritis and its frontiers].

Rev Neurol (Paris)

Service de Neurologie, CHU de Limoges.

Published: December 2002

The Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathies (CIDP) constitute a syndrome whose incidence is difficult to evaluate, and is probably underestimated. In the course of this presentation, we deliberately restricted discussion to issues raised in recent years concerning the extent of this syndrome. We discuss diagnostic criteria, especially electrophysiological ones. As the criteria proposed by the ad hoc committee of the American Academy of Neurology in 1991 have been questioned due to lack of sensitivity, new ones have been proposed recently. We briefly discuss the different types of chronic dysimmune demyelinating neuropathy: not only the CIDP, but also the Lewis and Sumner syndrome or multifocal inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy and the multiple conduction block neuropathies. At last, we point out the consistent finding of axonal involvement in the course of a chronic demyelinating neuropathy; over time, it can become pre-dominant, which may make diagnosis difficult by suggesting a chronic axonal neuropathy that may be assumed to be primary. Consideration of these points may help clinicians recognize more chronic dysimmune neuropathies, for which immunosuppressive therapy has been found to be effective.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

demyelinating neuropathy
12
inflammatory demyelinating
8
chronic dysimmune
8
chronic
5
[chronic polyradiculoneuritis
4
polyradiculoneuritis frontiers]
4
frontiers] chronic
4
chronic inflammatory
4
demyelinating
4
demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathies
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!