Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) is an autosomal dominant disease characterized by recurrent episodes of acute nerve palsies. We performed a clinical, electrophysiologic, and molecular study of 13 French families with HNPP associated with a chromosome 17p11.2 deletion in 36 individuals. There were electrophysiologic abnormalities in all symptomatic (n = 28) and asymptomatic (n = 8) deletion carriers, even in childhood. Bilateral delayed distal motor latency of the median nerve at the wrist, reduced sensory velocity in the palm-wrist segment, and delayed distal motor latency or reduced motor velocity in the peroneal nerve was diagnostic in at-risk relatives. This large series confirms the reliability of molecular analysis combined with a simplified electrophysiologic examination for the diagnosis of HNPP associated with 17p11.2 deletion.
This study was designed to provide Class I evidence for the safety and efficacy of IM IFNbeta-1a in the treatment of CIDP but has been subsequently classified as Class II due to a >20% patient dropout rate. Thus, this randomized, controlled clinical trial provides Class II evidence of no effect on primary and secondary endpoints of 4 dosage regimens of IM IFNbeta-1a added to IVIg in persons with CIDP.
Three patients from a single family of six siblings had homocystinemia and homocystinuria due to 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase deficiency and had severe recurrent strokes in adult life. Two of the patients died 1 year after clinical onset.
We studied 10 adults with meningoradiculitis several weeks after a tick bite (Ixodes). EMG evidence of denervation was associated with normal motor conduction velocities, prolongation of distal latencies, and low sensory amplitudes, suggesting axonal neuropathy. Sural nerve biopsies confirmed the axonal involvement. Infiltrations of lymphocytes and plasma cells, sometimes forming thick pericapillary cuffs with no accompanying necrosis of vessel walls, were numerous. Many capillaries of the endoneurium, perineurium, and epineurium were affected in this way.
A 38-year-old man presented with weakness of the lower limbs. Electrophysiology revealed a pronounced demyelinating neuropathy. Nerve biopsy disclosed de- and remyelinating lesions and characteristic lamellar inclusions in Schwann cells and macrophages. There was no familial history of neurologic disorder, and impairment of motor evoked potentials was the only sign of CNS involvement. Arylsulfatase A and cerebroside sulfate sulfatase activities in leukocytes and cultures of the patient's fibroblasts were low. The sulfatide loading test also revealed abnormal sulfatide accumulation. This may be the first reported case of adult metachromatic leukodystrophy presenting as peripheral neuropathy.
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