Twelve cases of chronic sensorimotor neuropathy associated with benign IgM paraproteinaemia are described. The onset was in the sixth or seventh decades and 9 cases were male. Tremor and ataxia were common features. The ESR was raised in 6 cases and the CSF protein content elevated in 10. There was severe reduction of motor nerve conduction velocity. Sera from all cases contained monoclonal IgM antibodies strongly reactive with human peripheral myelin, made up by the paraprotein. Histological studies on nerve biopsies taken from 8 cases all demonstrated a demyelinating neuropathy. Eight biopsies were examined by immunofluorescence. Monoclonal IgM was present on the myelin sheaths of surviving myelinated nerve fibres. The findings suggested that the neuropathy was of autoimmune origin and caused directly by the antimyelin antibody.
This article summarizes the management of 22 cases of pyoderma gangrenosum over the past four years at the hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia. Eighteen patients with pyoderma gangrenosum were studied using the most sensitive routine laboratory method for detection of monoclonal immunoglobulins, immunofixation electrophoresis. Four cases of IgA gammopathy were detected, confirming previous reports of the incidence of monoclonal gammopathy in pyoderma gangrenosum. High-dose glucocorticoid therapy (pulse therapy) is an effective treatment for some severe, refractory cases of pyoderma gangrenosum. Eight patients were treated with pulse therapy. Six responded favorably, and none had serious complications.
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