An Atypical Phenotype of Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy Associated with Ocular Palsy, IgM-anti Ganglioside Antibody, and Fever-induced Recurrence

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Abstract

We herein report a case of recurrent multifocal, distal-dominant-sensorimotor neuropathy with ophthalmoplegia, IgM anti-GM1 antibody, and pyrexia-associated relapse. The patient developed sensory disturbance in her limbs after febrile disease at 50 years old. She had experienced several similar episodes and was admitted to the hospital at 56 years old. Based on a pathological study and electrophysiological findings consistent with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP), maintenance IVIg therapy was administered and produced partial improvement with no relapse at one-year follow-up. Immunohistochemical studies suggested the presence of IgG (not IgM) anti-myelin antibodies. Chronic neuropathy with ophthalmoplegia and pyrexia-associated relapse may be a unique variant of CIDP.

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Horiuchi, M., Hongo, Y., Yamazaki, K., Komuta, Y., Kadoya, M., Takazaki, H., … Kaida, K. (2022). An Atypical Phenotype of Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating Polyradiculoneuropathy Associated with Ocular Palsy, IgM-anti Ganglioside Antibody, and Fever-induced Recurrence. Internal Medicine, 61(8), 1247–1252. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.7526-21

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