Stanley Iyadurai, MSc PhD MD Assistant Professor of ...

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Immune Neuropathies Stanley Iyadurai, MSc PhD MD Assistant Professor of Neurology, Neuromuscular Specialist, OSU, Columbus, OH August 28, 2015

Transcript of Stanley Iyadurai, MSc PhD MD Assistant Professor of ...

Immune Neuropathies Stanley Iyadurai, MSc PhD MD Assistant Professor of Neurology, Neuromuscular Specialist, OSU, Columbus, OH

August 28, 2015

Case

• 32-year old woman

• 1.5 year history of numbness/tingling/weakness

• Difficulty walking

3 months later

Inflammatory or Immune?

Not Clear

Inflammatory Cells – present or not?

Immune Components Deposited?

Immune-mediated Attack?

Involves Complement?

Involves Antibodies?

Inflammatory Markers are Absent?

Treat Inflammation/Use Immunomodulation?

Types

• Guillain-Barre Syndrome and variants

• CIDP and variants

• Multifocal Motor Neuropathy

• Paraneoplastic Neuropathies

Pathology

Ultrastructure

Muscle Biopsy

Guillain-Barre Syndrome

AIDP to Pure Motor, Sensory Motor, Bulbar and Miller-Fisher Syndrome

Hypothesis of Gangliosides mimicry of Campylobacter jejuni lipopolysaccharides

Ascending Weakness, Areflexia

Facial Weaknes

Increased CSF Protein

Acute Demyelinating Syndrome

Diagnosis

• Ascending Paralysis

• Areflexia

• Dysautonomia

• Nadir at 4-6 weeks

• Increased CSF Protein

• Demyelinating Velocities on EMG

• Conduction blocks

• Absent sensory responses

• Denervation – Fibs/Positive Sharp Waves

Motor-Sensory GBS

75% of GBS in Western Countries

Paresthesias

Facial Involvement

Autonomic Dysfunction

CMV infection in 20%

Pure Motor GBS

20% of GBS in Western Countries

(Paresthesias)

Distal Weakness in Extremities

Cranial Nerves, Respiratory Muscles Spared

C. jejuni 65%

IgG against GM1 abs - 40%

Miller-Fisher Variant

3% of GBS in Western Countries

Extraocular Muscle weakness, Ptosis

Paralysis of Sphincter Pupillae

Facial Weakness, Bulbar Involvement

Ataxia (50%)

IgG against GQ1b in 90%

GBS Treatment

IVIg, PE

For IgG against GM1 patients, IVIG > PE

Steroids not helpful – Harmful effects on denervated muscle or inhibit macrophage repair processes?

CIDP

• Previously known as “steroid-responsive neuropathy”.

• It affects 1 to 7.7 per 100,000 population

• Age of onset: 2 to 72 years of age with more prevalence in the fifth decade

CIDP

• chronic, monophasic/progressive or relapsing-remitting disease

• Characterized by proximal and distal weakness, in addition to sensory symptoms for more than 2 months

• On exam, hyporeflexia/areflexia is diffuse and it is usually a common finding on exam

• Objective sensory loss of 1 or more sensory modalities is present in 86% of cases

CIDP

Autoimmune!

Progressive or Relapsing/remitting

Proximal and Distal, Symmetric Weakness

Sensory Involvement + Areflexia; Variants

8 Weeks to Reach Nadir

EMG – Prolonged DL, Slowed NCV, Delayed or Absent F-waves, Conduction Block, Temporal Dispersion

CSF with Increased Protein

CIDP

CIDP Diagnosis

• Clinical Picture

• Cerebrospinal fluid

• Electrodiagnostic studies

• Nerve or Nerve and Muscle biopsy

CIDP Variants

• Typical CIDP constitutes about 50 % of cases of CIDP

• The rest constitutes “CIDP variants”

Major CIDP variants:

• Distal Acquired Demyelinating symmetric polyneuropathy (DADS)

• Lewis-Summer syndrome or Multifocal Acquired Demyelinating Sensory and Motor Neuropathy (MADSAM)

• Sensory predominant CIDP

• Motor predominant CIDP

• Focal CIDP

CIDP - Treatment

Prednisone, IVIg, PE

Long-term Treatment

Multifocal Motor Neuropathy

IgM against GM-1 antibodies (85%)

Pure Motor disease

Focal weakness

Involvement of subsegments of terminal nerves

Treatment with IVIg, rituximab

Multifocal Motor Neuropathy

Multifocal Motor Neuropathy

Distal Acquired Demyelinating symmetric polyneuropathy (DADS) • Accounts 2 to 17% of CIDP cases

• Distal form of CIDP

• It is characterized mainly by sensory symptoms, although abnormal motor nerve conduction studies in form of demyelinating disease can be observed.

• CSF shows elevated protein in 86% of cases

• In 2/3 of cases, an abnormal monoclonal protein (M protein) on serum protein electrophoresis or IFE is found, and in 2/3 of those, antibody against Myelin-Associated Glycoprotein (MAG)

• Poor response to Immunotherapy, and treatment is mostly supportive

MAG Neuropathy

Lewis-Summer syndrome or Multifocal Acquired Demyelinating Sensory and Motor Neuropathy (MADSAM) • It accounts 6-15% of CIDP cases

• It is a distal form of CIDP

• Males are commonly affected in the fifth decade

• Upper extremities are affected mostly (Lower extremities are involved in 38% of cases

• Mistaken as entrapment neuropathies at median and ulnar nerves (wrist and elbow respectively).

• Cranial nerve involvement including II, III, IV and V has been reported

MADSAM

• Main electrodiagnostic feature is conduction block (importance to have proximal stimulation at Erb’s point)

• CSF protein is normal or mildly elevated

• Intravenous Immunoglobulin is the first line treatment

Sensory Predominant CIDP

• It accounts for 6-12% of CIDP

• Symptoms are sensory and include the following: numbness and tingling in “stocking-glove distribution”, neuropathic pain, or proprioception deficit leading to sensory ataxia.

• Strength is usually normal

• On electrodiagnostic studies, demyelinating changes are seen in motor as well in sensory nerves

• Treatment if clinically disabled

Motor CIDP

• Pure Motor form of CIDP

Focal CIDP

• Only in specific location

Other Dysimmune Neuropathies

• Anti-Hu syndrome • Treat cancer

• Anti-SS-A, SS-B • Hydroxychloroquine

• MGUS (monoclonal gammopathy of unknown significance) • Plasma Exchange, cyclophosphamide

• POEMS (Polyneuropathy, organomegaly, endocrinopathy, M-protein, Skin changes) • Plasma Exchange, cyclophosphamide, Stem cell transplant?

• GALOP (Gait disorder, autoantibody, Late-onset, Polyneuropathy) • ??

Hereditary neuropathies

Chronic sensory neuropathy

High arches & Hammer toes

Preserved gastrocnemius size

CMT 1A

PMP-22 duplication CMT 1X

CMT 2A2