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Nerve conduction studies (NCSs) and electromyography (EMG) play key roles in the evaluation of patients with suspected polyneuropathy. Although polyneuropathy has hundreds of potential causes, they can be grouped into several large categories ( Fig. 29.1 ). The first step in the evaluation of a patient with polyneuropathy is to reduce the differential diagnosis to a smaller, more manageable number of possibilities. This usually can be accomplished by acquiring several critical pieces of information from the history, physical examination, and electrophysiologic studies. Electrophysiologic studies can be used (1) to confirm the presence of a polyneuropathy, (2) to assess its severity and pattern, (3) to determine whether motor, sensory, or a combination of fibers are involved, and, most importantly, (4) to assess whether the underlying pathophysiology is axonal loss or demyelination. In cases in which a demyelinating polyneuropathy is found, further differentiation between an acquired and genetic condition can often be made. The information obtained from electrophysiologic testing, in conjunction with key pieces of clinical information, usually allows the differential diagnosis to be narrowed considerably so that further laboratory testing can be more appropriately applied and a final diagnosis reached. In addition, abnormalities in muscles and nerves on ultrasound can aid in the differential diagnosis of several selected peripheral neuropathies.
Polyneuropathy literally means dysfunction or disease of many or all peripheral nerves. Because peripheral nerves can react to disease in only a limited number of ways, polyneuropathies of many different causes may present with similar symptoms and signs. Indeed, most patients with polyneuropathy first present with a combination of sensory and motor symptoms and signs in the feet and lower legs, which later spread proximally in the legs and then into the hands and arms. Despite the many similarities, one can always limit the differential diagnosis of a polyneuropathy by determining the answers to seven key questions.
The temporal course and progression can be obtained by the history alone and often confirmed by electrophysiologic studies. Most polyneuropathies are chronic, and their onset cannot be easily determined. Acute polyneuropathies are notably less common ( Box 29.1 ). Among them, Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) (and its most common variant, acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy [AIDP]) is the most distinctive, with an onset over a few days or a few weeks at most. Similarly, most polyneuropathies are slowly progressive ( Fig. 29.2 ). Polyneuropathies that progress in a stepwise fashion are infrequent and are often associated with a mononeuropathy multiplex pattern (discussed later). Likewise, the history of a relapsing/remitting course is distinctly unusual and suggests either an intermittent exposure/intoxication or a variant of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP).
Guillain-Barré syndrome
Porphyria
Diphtheria
Drugs (e.g., dapsone, nitrofurantoin, vincristine)
Toxins (e.g., arsenic, thallium, triorthocresylphosphate)
Tick paralysis
Vasculitis
The next step is to determine which fiber types are involved. This information is obtained primarily from the history and confirmed by physical examination and electrophysiologic tests. Nerve fibers can be categorized either by the modality carried (motor, sensory, autonomic) or by fiber size. All motor fibers are large-diameter, myelinated fibers, whereas all autonomic fibers are small-diameter, mostly unmyelinated fibers. However, sensory fibers may be either large or small in diameter. Large sensory fibers mediate vibration, proprioception, and touch, whereas small sensory fibers convey pain and temperature sensations.
When nerve is diseased, it can react in a limited number of ways. Thus, many peripheral nerve disorders present with similar symptoms despite different etiologies. Symptoms and signs of nerve dysfunction result either from lack of function ( negative symptoms and signs) or from abnormal function or overfunctioning ( positive symptoms and signs). For example, anyone who has fallen asleep on his or her arm can remember the initial numbness or lack of feeling (negative symptoms), followed by intense pins-and-needles paresthesias (positive symptoms) as circulation is restored. Characteristic positive or negative sensory symptoms and signs caused by diseased nerves help one recognize which fiber types are involved ( Table 29.1 ).
Negative | Positive | |
---|---|---|
Motor | Weakness | Fasciculations |
Fatigue | Cramps | |
Hyporeflexia or areflexia | Myokymia | |
Hypotonia | Restless legs | |
Orthopedic deformities | “Tightness” | |
(e.g., pes cavus, hammertoes) | ||
Sensory | ||
Large fiber | Decreased vibration sensation | “Tingling” |
Decreased joint position sensation | “Pins and needles” | |
Hyporeflexia or areflexia | ||
Ataxia | ||
Hypotonia | ||
Small fiber | Decreased pain sensation | “Burning” |
Decreased temperature sensation | “Jabbing” | |
“Shooting” | ||
Autonomic | Hypotension | Hypertension |
Arrhythmia | Arrhythmia | |
Decreased sweating | Increased sweating | |
Impotence | ||
Urinary retention |
Determining which fiber types are involved has important diagnostic implications. Most polyneuropathies involve both sensory and motor fibers on electrophysiologic testing, even though, clinically, most distal axonal polyneuropathies exhibit sensory symptoms and findings long before the disease process becomes sufficiently severe to cause actual weakness. Patients with certain hereditary polyneuropathies (e.g., Charcot-Marie-Tooth [CMT] polyneuropathy) and conditions such as lead poisoning, porphyria, and GBS may exhibit predominantly motor symptoms and signs. On the sensory side, pure sensory neuropathies also are unusual and often suggest a primary process affecting the dorsal root ganglia. These sensory neuronopathies are quite rare and are characteristically seen acutely or subacutely as a paraneoplastic syndrome, postinfectious process, or associated with Sjögren syndrome or pyridoxine (B 6 ) intoxication. Chronic sensory neuronopathies may be seen in the inherited sensory neuropathies and as a component of some inherited neurodegenerative conditions (e.g., Friedreich’s ataxia).
Large and small fibers are affected in most polyneuropathies. Only a few polyneuropathies preferentially affect small fibers ( Box 29.2 ). Manifestations include autonomic dysfunction and a distal sensory deficit, particularly for pinprick, often associated with painful, burning dysesthesias. It is essential to appreciate that routine NCSs assess only large myelinated fibers. A patient who has a pure small-fiber polyneuropathy, with complete sparing of the large fibers , may have completely normal electrophysiologic studies. Conversely, large-fiber polyneuropathies always show abnormalities on electrophysiologic testing. Predominantly large-fiber polyneuropathies result in clinical sensory deficits (particularly for vibration and touch), weakness, and loss of tendon reflexes, with little or no autonomic and pain/temperature sensation loss.
Diabetes
Amyloidosis (inherited and acquired)
Toxins (especially alcohol)
Drugs (e.g., ddI, ddC)
Hypertriglyceridemia
Hereditary sensory neuropathies
Tangier disease
Fabry disease
Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
Idiopathic (especially in the elderly)
The overall pattern of the polyneuropathy is determined largely based on the clinical examination and is supplemented and confirmed by electrophysiologic studies. In most polyneuropathies, there is a distal-to-proximal gradient of symptoms and signs. Distal symptoms and findings occur in most polyneuropathies, in part indicating the frequency with which axonal loss is the underlying pathologic process. Most axonal polyneuropathies exhibit a distal-to-proximal, dying back pattern, reflecting that the chance of damage to a nerve is length dependent ( Fig. 29.3 ). Thus, the longest nerves are affected first, resulting in a stocking-glove distribution of symptoms. Patients initially develop numbness or weakness of the toes and feet, which then slowly progresses up the leg. When the process reaches the upper calf, the fingertips become involved as well, because the distance from the lumbosacral spinal cord to the upper calf is the same as that from the cervical spinal cord to the fingertips. Only rarely will polyneuropathies preferentially affect the shorter, more proximal nerves before the distal ones (e.g., in porphyria, proximal diabetic neuropathy, and some cases of inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy).
After determining whether a distal-to-proximal gradient is present, one should next assess the polyneuropathy for symmetry. Nearly all polyneuropathies are symmetric. The presence of any significant asymmetry is a key finding; it usually excludes a large number of toxic, metabolic, and genetic conditions that cause only a symmetric pattern . Asymmetry implies the possibility of (1) a mononeuropathy multiplex pattern, (2) a superimposed radiculopathy or entrapment neuropathy, or (3) a variant of CIDP. NCSs and EMG frequently are useful in sorting out these possibilities.
The pattern of a mononeuropathy multiplex is one of the most important patterns to recognize and differentiate from the length-dependent, dying-back, axonal polyneuropathy. The clinical presentation is distinctive: there is an asymmetric, stepwise progression of individual cranial and/or peripheral neuropathies ( Fig. 29.4 ). Over time, a confluent pattern may develop, which may be difficult to distinguish from a generalized polyneuropathy. In most cases, the individual neuropathies are of named nerves (i.e., median, ulnar, peroneal, etc.) as opposed to small nerve twigs. Mononeuropathy multiplex has a limited differential diagnosis ( Box 29.3 ) and most often occurs in the setting of vasculitis and vasculitic neuropathy. As each subsequent nerve is infarcted, pain develops (often severe), followed hours or days later by weakness and numbness in the nerve’s distribution. Although other organ systems are often involved, the initial clinical presentation of systemic vasculitis may involve only the peripheral nervous system. Indeed, there are now well-recognized cases in which vasculitis remains confined to the peripheral nervous system.
Vasculitis (e.g., polyarteritis nodosa, Churg-Strauss syndrome, Wegener’s syndrome, hypersensitivity, cryoglobulinemia, systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren syndrome, chronic active hepatitis)
Diabetes
Inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (Lewis-Sumner variant)
Multiple entrapments (hereditary and acquired)
Infection (e.g., Lyme, leprosy, human immunodeficiency virus)
Infiltration (e.g., granulomatous disease [sarcoid], neoplasm [lymphoma, leukemia])
Pathologically, injury to nerves consists of two major processes: axonal loss or demyelination. The vast majority of polyneuropathies are primarily axonal. In demyelinating polyneuropathies, the initial injury to the nerves reflects damage to or dysfunction of the Schwann cells and the myelin sheaths. As a consequence of demyelination, conduction is impaired with marked slowing of conduction velocity or frank conduction block. In establishing the differential diagnosis of a peripheral nerve disorder, the presence of demyelination is always a key finding (see later). Demyelination may be demonstrated either by nerve biopsy and pathologic examination or, more easily, by electrophysiologic testing. When NCSs demonstrate a polyneuropathy to be predominantly demyelinating, the differential diagnosis is readily narrowed to a small group of disorders ( Box 29.4 ).
Charcot-Marie-Tooth, type I (CMT1)
Charcot-Marie-Tooth, type IV (CMT4)
Charcot-Marie-Tooth, X-linked (CMTX)
Dejerine-Sottas disease a
a Dejerine-Sottas disease is a historical term used to denote a severe demyelinating neuropathy in children. The classic phenotype described a hypotonic infant with areflexia and hypertrophic nerves; on nerve conduction studies, conduction velocities were extremely slow, typically around 6 m/s. Formerly considered a distinct entity with autosomal recessive inheritance, genetic analysis has demonstrated that Dejerine-Sottas is a syndrome with either recessive inheritance or autosomal dominant inheritance with de novo mutations. The recessive forms are now incorporated into the CMT4 group. The de novo autosomal dominant forms have mutations on the same genes implicated for CMT1 ( MPZ , PMP22 , and EGR2 ), but with the genetic defect resulting in a much more severe demyelinating neuropathy.
Refsum disease
Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy (HNPP)
Metachromatic leukodystrophy
Krabbe disease
Adrenoleukodystrophy/adrenomyeloneuropathy
Cockayne syndrome
Niemann-Pick disease
Cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis
Mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy (MNGIE)
Acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (AIDP, the most common variant of Guillain-Barré syndrome)
Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP)
Idiopathic
Associated with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection
Associated with monoclonal gammopathy of unclear significance (MGUS) (especially immunoglobulin M)
Associated with anti–myelin-associated glycoprotein antibodies
Associated with osteosclerotic myeloma
Associated with Waldenström macroglobulinemia
Multifocal motor neuropathy with conduction block (±GM 1 antibodies)
Diphtheria
Toxic (i.e., amiodarone, perhexiline, arsenic, glue sniffing, buckthorn shrub poisoning)
For any patient with a polyneuropathy, especially when the diagnosis is not clear, particular attention must be paid to family history. There are a large number of inherited polyneuropathies. Although for most of them only symptomatic therapy is available, correct diagnosis is important for genetic counseling and prognosis and to avoid unnecessary or inappropriate further testing and treatment. Of course, this may change in the future as more genetic modifying treatments become available. CMT neuropathy refers to a group of inherited disorders characterized by a chronic motor and sensory polyneuropathy. CMT accounts for the majority of inherited polyneuropathies and, in many large series, represents a significant proportion of patients with difficult-to-diagnose polyneuropathies. Four major types of CMT are defined based on their inheritance and physiology: the demyelinating autosomal dominant form is CMT1; the axonal autosomal dominant form is CMT2; the autosomal recessive form, most of which are demyelinating, is CMT4; and the X-linked demyelinating form is CMTX. Within each type, there are several subtypes based on the specific genetic defect. In contrast to CMT, there are a smaller group of inherited polyneuropathies associated with defects of metabolism that have been described. Most are extremely rare and are associated with other systemic abnormalities.
Inherited polyneuropathies may affect certain individuals so minimally or may progress so slowly over an individual’s lifetime that the person never seeks medical attention. Therefore, it is often beneficial to examine family members, both clinically and with NCSs and EMG, to help determine whether the underlying etiology of the patient’s polyneuropathy is genetic. Several clinical clues, however, suggest the possibility of an inherited polyneuropathy ( Fig. 29.5 ):
Foot deformity (pes cavus, hammer toes, high arches)
History of a long-standing polyneuropathy (many years and often decades)
History of very slow progression
Few positive sensory symptoms
Family history of “polio,” “rheumatism,” “arthritis,” or other disorders that actually might have been inherited polyneuropathy
A careful history and general physical examination are essential in evaluating a patient with polyneuropathy. Several medical conditions are strongly associated with polyneuropathy. Most prominent among them are diabetes and other endocrine disorders, cancer, connective tissue disorders, porphyria, vitamin and other deficiency states, and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection.
Finally, it is always important to ask about occupational and exposure history. Among drugs, most notable are cancer chemotherapeutic agents, which frequently result in polyneuropathy that is detectable either clinically or electrically. In addition, a large number of prescription drugs, as well as over-the-counter medicines, can cause polyneuropathy. A careful review of all medicines is always important.
Asking about a patient’s occupational and recreational activities occasionally elicits a toxic source for the neuropathy. One should always inquire about the patient’s use of alcohol, which is one of the most frequent causes of toxic polyneuropathy.
The underlying pathology of the vast majority of polyneuropathies is axonal degeneration, usually affecting both motor and sensory fibers. Axonal polyneuropathies include nearly all diabetic, toxic, metabolic, drug-induced, nutritional, connective tissue, and endocrine-associated polyneuropathies. In addition, there are a small number of inherited CMT neuropathies that are axonal. The autosomal dominant axonal form of CMT is now known as CMT2. CMT2 is further divided into several subtypes based on the specific genetic defect and accounts for approximately 10%–15% of CMT inherited neuropathies.
Clinically, the patient with an axonal polyneuropathy usually presents with a stocking-glove distribution of symptoms and signs, including distal sensory loss and weakness. Ankle reflexes usually are absent, whereas knee and upper extremity reflexes are preserved, unless the polyneuropathy is severe.
In severe cases, the pattern of abnormalities may become more complex. Sensory symptoms and signs may develop not only over the limbs but also over the anterior chest and abdomen (escutcheon sign, which is the shape of a shield), reflecting distal degeneration of the thoracic intercostal nerves, which originate from the back and run around the abdomen and chest. If this pattern is not appreciated, a mistaken impression of a spinal level may result. ( Note : A level will only be found examining the front, not the back.) In the most extreme cases, sensory loss may develop over the top of the head due to degeneration of the distal trigeminal and cervical nerves.
Axonal polyneuropathies are associated with a characteristic pattern of nerve conduction results, provided the polyneuropathy has been present long enough for wallerian degeneration to have occurred (i.e., 3–9 days). In general, motor and sensory amplitudes decrease, with normal or only slightly slowed distal latencies, late responses, and conduction velocities. The changes are always more marked in the lower extremities, where the pathology is the greatest.
Likewise, evidence of axonal loss is found on needle EMG examination, more prominent distally than proximally, with the lower extremities more affected than the upper extremities. Of course, EMG findings are dependent on the length of time a polyneuropathy has been present. Denervation typically develops within weeks and reinnervation after weeks to months. Different patterns also develop depending on the tempo of the illness. If the process is relatively active and progressive, a combination of denervation and reinnervated motor unit action potentials (MUAPs) with decreased recruitment will be seen and again will be more prominent distally. In cases in which the polyneuropathy is long-standing and only very slowly progressive, reinnervation may completely keep pace with denervation. In such cases, only reinnervated MUAPs with decreased recruitment will be seen distally, with little or no active denervation.
Most polyneuropathies have been present for several months or years before coming to evaluation. Accordingly, when a patient with an axonal polyneuropathy is first seen in the EMG laboratory, a combination of denervation and reinnervation is usually present.
Nearly all axonal polyneuropathies are characterized by a distal pattern of abnormalities. Thus, the lower extremities are affected first and most prominently. Accordingly, the amplitude of the sural sensory study (normal or abnormal) takes on great significance in the electrodiagnostic (EDX) evaluation of most axonal polyneuropathies. However, interpretation of the sural amplitude has several limitations, especially in the following scenarios:
Younger individuals have much higher baseline sural amplitudes than older individuals. Thus, if a young patient had a sural amplitude of 30 μV, then developed an axonal polyneuropathy and the sural amplitude decreased to 15 μV, this value would still be considered normal in most EMG labs.
Older individuals may have low or difficult-to-obtain sural sensory responses at baseline. Thus, in an 80-year-old patient with numbness of the feet and a sural amplitude of 3 μV, it is difficult to know whether this value indicates a neuropathy or is simply consistent with age.
In obese individuals, the additional adipose tissue between the skin and the underlying nerve may result in an attenuation of the sensory nerve amplitude. Thus, in an obese patient with a sural amplitude of 5 μV, it may be difficult to know if this value indicates a neuropathy or simply denotes a reduced amplitude from technical issues related to increased intervening adipose tissue in the lower leg.
In these situations, the use of the sural/radial amplitude ratio (SRAR) may be helpful. The SRAR is especially helpful in those patients with a borderline normal sural amplitude. The rationale for using the SRAR is straightforward: in a distal dying-back axonal neuropathy, the sural amplitude should be disproportionally affected compared with the radial amplitude. In the original description of this technique by Rutkove et al., an SRAR <0.40 had a specificity of 90% and a sensitivity of 90% in detecting an axonal polyneuropathy. In addition, the SRAR was less dependent on age than the sural amplitude alone and also did not appear to be affected by body mass index. A latter study using a larger cohort of normal subjects suggested that a cutoff value of 0.4 may have been too high, and a more appropriate cutoff should be 0.21. Dropping the cutoff to 0.21 improved the specificity to 95% (i.e., reduced the number of false positives to under 5%).
Thus, the SRAR can be a useful adjunct in the EDX evaluation of axonal polyneuropathy. Of course, like all nerve conduction data, it relies on obtaining valid data. One needs to be sure that the amplitude of each nerve has been maximized and that the recording electrodes are optimally placed over each nerve. Moreover, in the rare situation wherein there is a superimposed sural or radial mononeuropathy, the SRAR cannot be considered valid for the electrodiagnosis of axonal polyneuropathy.
The pattern of an acute or subacute axonal polyneuropathy is distinctly unusual. If the polyneuropathy is very acute (less than several weeks’ duration) and denervation is not yet present, the only abnormality on needle EMG examination will be normal-appearing MUAPs with reduced recruitment. However, this is the same pattern on needle EMG that occurs in an acute demyelinating polyneuropathy . If an axonal polyneuropathy is subacute (more than several weeks but less than several months), active denervation will also be present. MUAPs again will be normal in morphology, but with reduced recruitment. These two patterns are very unusual in the EMG laboratory because very few polyneuropathies are acute or subacute, and of the ones that are acute/subacute, most are associated with demyelination and not axonal loss. Acute axonal polyneuropathies include those associated with porphyria or vasculitis and those rare cases of GBS that are axonal and not demyelinating.
NCSs and EMG are also used to assess the pattern of an axonal polyneuropathy. Nearly all axonal polyneuropathies are symmetric and distal. Any asymmetry is distinctly unusual and implies either (1) a mononeuropathy multiplex pattern or (2) a second superimposed process, such as an entrapment neuropathy or radiculopathy. Of course, patients with polyneuropathy of any kind are more susceptible to mononeuropathies at typical entrapment sites, especially median neuropathy at the wrist and ulnar neuropathy at the elbow. Any significant asymmetry found on NCSs and EMG that is not explained by an entrapment neuropathy or superimposed radiculopathy should seriously raise the possibility of an underlying mononeuropathy multiplex pattern and should lead one to consider the possibility of vasculitic polyneuropathy.
Like the finding of asymmetry, that of proximal more than distal abnormalities has important diagnostic significance in an axonal polyneuropathy. Proximal changes (e.g., paraspinal muscles, shoulder and hip girdle muscles) suggest a non–length-dependent pattern, implying either the possibility of porphyria, which characteristically affects shorter nerves first, or the combination of both peripheral nerve and nerve root pathology (i.e., a polyradiculoneuropathy). Diabetic neuropathy is the best example of a true polyradiculoneuropathy, showing abnormalities both distally and proximally.
In any discussion of axonal neuropathies, special mention should be made of diabetic neuropathy. Peripheral nervous system manifestations of diabetes are numerous and varied. Isolated mononeuropathies of cranial nerves (e.g., facial palsy), intercostal nerves (known as diabetic thoracoabdominal neuropathy), or peripheral nerves may occur. Several types of polyneuropathy may occur. The most common, a distal sensorimotor polyneuropathy, is a typical axonal polyneuropathy affecting both large and small sensory fibers. On EMG, however, findings of a polyradiculoneuropathy are usually present. Diabetic patients may also present with a pure autonomic polyneuropathy or a small-fiber sensory polyneuropathy, with distal burning and pain. If large sensory and motor fibers are spared, such patients will have completely normal EDX studies. Other patients with diabetes will present with more proximal nerve syndromes, either at the root or plexus level, especially in the lower extremity (i.e., proximal diabetic neuropathy, diabetic amyotrophy, etc.). Large-fiber diabetic neuropathies usually demonstrate axonal changes on NCSs. Although most axonal polyneuropathies, including those associated with diabetes , have some secondary demyelination, the electrophysiologic criteria for primary demyelination are not met. Only in some cases of uremic polyneuropathy, especially when combined with diabetic polyneuropathy, do nerve conduction velocities slow sufficiently to approach or exceed the criteria set for demyelinative slowing.
Slowing of conduction velocity to less than 75% of the lower limit of normal is one of the fundamental EDX criteria for establishing primary demyelination in polyneuropathy. When compound muscle action potential (CMAP) amplitudes are markedly reduced secondary to axonal loss, however, conduction velocity slowing may be seen secondary to severe axonal loss with dropout of the fastest-conducting fibers. It is in this situation, when distal CMAP amplitudes are low and conduction velocity slowing nears 75% of the lower limit of normal, that it may be difficult to differentiate between a primary demyelinating polyneuropathy and a severe axonal polyneuropathy.
In such cases, one useful technique is to compare conduction velocities recording a distal and a proximal muscle across the same segment of nerve. In the leg, the peroneal nerve is most useful for this study. Peroneal motor studies are performed stimulating below the fibular neck and at the lateral popliteal fossa and recording simultaneously from the extensor digitorum brevis (EDB), a distal muscle, and the tibialis anterior, a proximal muscle ( Fig. 29.6 ). Conduction velocities across this same segment of nerve are then compared.
In patients with demyelinating polyneuropathies, conduction velocities typically are slowed at both recording sites, with no difference between proximal and distal sites ( Fig. 29.7 ). In patients with axonal polyneuropathies, however, conduction velocities may be slowed recording the EDB but usually are normal or only mildly reduced when measured from the tibialis anterior. This distal-to-proximal gradient of conduction velocity slowing in axonal polyneuropathies may be very helpful in differentiating a primary demyelinating from axonal polyneuropathy, especially when the distal conduction velocities are near the cutoff value for demyelinative slowing.
For any patient with a polyneuropathy, the presence of demyelination as the primary pathology has special diagnostic significance. Nearly all polyneuropathies result in primary axonal loss, and any demyelination occurs as a secondary phenomenon. Few polyneuropathies are associated with demyelination as the primary pathologic process. Although demyelination usually is demonstrated most readily by NCSs and less often by nerve biopsy, several clinical clues may suggest primary demyelination:
Global areflexia
Hypertrophic nerves
Moderate-to-severe muscle weakness with relative preservation of muscle bulk
Motor symptoms and signs more prominent than sensory ones
On NCSs, disorders with primary demyelination are generally associated with markedly prolonged distal latencies (>130% of the upper limit of normal), markedly slowed conduction velocities (usually <75% of the lower limit of normal), and markedly prolonged or absent late responses (>130% of the upper limit of normal).
In addition, NCSs often can be used to distinguish between acquired and inherited demyelinating polyneuropathies. In a patient with an inherited condition, all myelin tends to be affected equally; thus, uniform slowing of conduction velocity occurs. Accordingly, NCSs usually are symmetric from side to side. In contrast, acquired conditions (e.g., GBS, CIDP) are associated with patchy, often multifocal demyelination. As a result, asymmetry is found on NCSs (even in the face of clinical symmetry), along with evidence of conduction block and temporal dispersion. Conduction block and temporal dispersion at non-entrapment sites are key findings for differentiating acquired from inherited demyelinating polyneuropathies ( Fig. 29.8 ).
GBS is now most properly thought of as a syndrome that comprises several variants, with AIDP being the most common in North America . GBS is an immune-mediated, rapidly progressive, predominantly motor polyneuropathy that often leads to bulbar and respiratory compromise. It is one of the most common of all neuromuscular emergencies. Although the overall prognosis is favorable in more than 80% of patients, the hospital course is frequently long, followed by a prolonged recuperation. NCSs and EMG play an important role in the diagnosis of GBS because early recognition is necessary to begin appropriate treatment and avoid potential medical complications.
People of all ages can be affected, although GBS is most common in young adults. An antecedent event, often an upper respiratory tract infection or gastroenteritis, is found in approximately 60% of patients. Precipitating factors include campylobacter, cytomegalovirus, Epstein-Barr virus, Zika virus, and HIV infection, as well as vaccination, surgery, trauma, and malignancy (especially lymphoma). More recently, GBS has been seen as a rare complication in cancer patients treated with immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICPIs). These are monoclonal antibodies that target cytoplasmic t-lymphocyte associated antigen-4, programed cell death receptor-1, or programmed cell death ligand-1. These agents inhibit normal physiologic mechanisms that protect against autoimmunity. Although they are highly effective as immunotherapy in several types of refractory cancers, they can result in a large number of immune-related adverse effects (irAEs) that include several neuromuscular conditions, including GBS, CIDP, myasthenia gravis, and myositis. GBS is the second most common neuromuscular irAE associated with ICPIs. The clinical course and electrophysiology are similar to other cases of GBS (see later). The major exception is that a CSF pleocytosis is seen in 56% of patients.
The classic presentation of GBS is a rapidly ascending paralysis. Many variants have also been seen, including proximal weakness, descending weakness, and the Miller-Fisher variant (ophthalmoplegia, ataxia, and areflexia). Early in the course, patients may complain of a sense of imbalance or poor coordination during walking. It is not unusual for a patient to be sent home from the emergency department with very mild gait ataxia as the only sign, only to return the next day with rapidly progressing weakness. Sensory symptoms with little objective sensory loss are common. Distal paresthesias in the fingers and toes typically are present simultaneously (an unusual finding in other polyneuropathies). A sensory level is not found. Hyporeflexia or areflexia develops early. Any weak limb with preserved reflexes should call the diagnosis of GBS into question. Bifacial weakness occurs in 50% of patients. Bulbar weakness with dysarthria and dysphagia are also frequent. Other cranial neuropathies are uncommon. Back and radicular pain occurs in up to 25% of patients and may require narcotics. Autonomic dysfunction can occur. A fixed resting tachycardia is very common. Ileus, transient bladder dysfunction, arrhythmia, labile blood pressure, the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone, and impaired thermoregulation can occur.
Most patients continue to progress for days to weeks and then experience a plateau before recovery commences. Intubation is required in one-third of patients, usually between days 6 and 18. Progression beyond 4 weeks is rare for any patient with GBS.
During the first few days of the illness, all NCSs may be normal. The first changes in AIDP are often delayed, absent, or impersistent F and H responses, reflecting proximal demyelination. Indeed, pathologically, AIDP often starts at the root level as a polyradiculopathy. Later, routine motor NCSs show prolonged distal latencies, along with other evidence of segmental demyelination, especially conduction block and temporal dispersion at non-entrapment sites. These changes are present in 50% of patients by 2 weeks and in 85% by 3 weeks. There is, however, a wide range of progression. Some patients have inexcitable nerves early on, due to either secondary wallerian degeneration or presumed distal demyelination. Notably, 10% of patients never fulfill criteria for acquired demyelination, sometimes because motor responses are absent. Although GBS is most often a demyelinating polyneuropathy in the form of AIDP, rare cases are associated with a similar clinical presentation but show axonal changes on NCSs. If the syndrome is pure motor and axonal, it is known as acute motor axonal neuropathy . If both motor and sensory fibers are involved, the designation acute motor sensory axonal neuropathy is used. Especially in the latter case, it is essential that these patients are screened for porphyria, which is another cause of a severe, acute axonal sensorimotor polyneuropathy.
To demonstrate segmental demyelination on motor NCSs, a combination of conduction block or temporal dispersion, or marked slowing of distal latencies, conduction velocities, or late responses must be seen. For acute polyneuropathies, the electrophysiologic criteria for segmental demyelination often are liberalized ( Box 29.5 ).
Demonstrate at least three of the following in motor nerves:
Prolonged DLs (two or more nerves, not at entrapment sites)
DL >115% ULN (for normal CMAP amplitudes)
DL >125% ULN (for CMAP amplitudes < LLN)
CV slowing (two or more nerves, not across entrapment sites)
CV <90% LLN (for CMAP amplitudes >50% LLN)
CV <80% LLN (for CMAP amplitudes <50% LLN)
( Note : CVs are commonly preserved early in the course of acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy.)
Prolonged late responses: F response and H reflexes (one or more nerves)>125% ULN; or absent F responses
( Note : If distal CMAP amplitude is very low, absent F waves may not be abnormal.)
Conduction block/temporal dispersion (one or more nerves)
Unequivocal conduction block: proximal/distal CMAP area ratio <0.50
Possible conduction block: proximal/distal CMAP amplitude ratio <0.70
Temporal dispersion: proximal/distal CMAP duration ratio >1.15
Although almost 90% of patients will have motor abnormalities during the first few weeks, far fewer will have sensory nerve conduction abnormalities. Characteristically, sensory studies are normal early on. Later in the first week or two, sensory studies may show so-called sural sparing (i.e., the sural sensory response is normal whereas the median and ulnar sensory potentials are reduced or absent). This pattern is very unusual in the typical axonal, dying-back polyneuropathy. Many believe that sural sparing in the presence of a typical clinical picture is virtually diagnostic of AIDP. Why sural sparing occurs is not completely known, but it is likely related to the preferential, early involvement of the smaller myelinated fibers in AIDP. Although it is not intuitively obvious, the recorded sural sensory fibers are actually larger, and accordingly have more myelin, than the median and ulnar sensory fibers. The routine median and ulnar sensory potentials are recorded distally over the fingers, where the nerve diameters are more tapered than those of the sural nerve. The sural nerve actually has larger-diameter myelinated fibers, where it is stimulated and recorded in the lower calf. These larger-diameter fibers presumably are relatively more resistant to the early inflammatory, demyelinating attack.
The needle EMG in early AIDP reveals the characteristic demyelinating pattern: no denervation, normal MUAP morphology, but with reduced recruitment in weak muscles. Exceptionally, somewhat larger MUAPs may be seen in early AIDP. These MUAPs are not reinnervated but occur for the same reason as sural sparing: smaller myelinated fibers are affected first in AIDP. Thus, the normal, smaller MUAPs are blocked first because they are innervated by smaller-diameter, myelinated fibers. The normal, larger MUAPs may then be the only remaining, unblocked MUAPs. These larger MUAPs usually are not seen as individual potentials during the routine needle EMG examination. Because they are recruited last, usually with maximal contraction, they normally are buried in the interference pattern. With the smaller MUAPs blocked, however, these longer MUAPs are uncovered and more easily seen.
Early in the course of AIDP, there is usually no abnormal spontaneous activity at rest. The only exception may be the presence of occasional myokymic discharges. Myokymic discharges may be seen in the limbs, and especially in the face, even in the absence of clinical myokymia.
Despite the fact that AIDP has a predominantly demyelinating pathophysiology, there is always some secondary axonal loss. This leads to fibrillation potentials on needle EMG, usually developing within 2–5 weeks and becoming maximal at 6–10 weeks. Interestingly, fibrillation potentials are equally common in distal and proximal muscles, a finding that likely represents the random multifocal pathology. Fibrillation potentials may then persist for many months. After denervation, MUAPs can become more polyphasic (usually in the fourth week), followed by an increase in their amplitude and duration.
Although NCSs and EMG are principally used for diagnosis, they also are helpful in assessing prognosis. The best predictor of prognosis is the distal CMAP amplitude. Low distal CMAP amplitudes (<20% of the lower limit of normal at 3–5 weeks) are the best single predictor of a poor outcome or prolonged course. Other nerve conduction and EMG data (including the amount of fibrillation potentials) actually correlate quite poorly with prognosis. Indeed, some patients have nerve conduction results that appear to worsen despite clinical improvement. This likely represents the early recovery of fibers that previously were blocked and now are able to conduct, albeit very slowly.
When a patient with a chronic polyneuropathy is found to have evidence of a primary demyelinating process on NCSs ( Box 29.6 ), the differential diagnosis narrows considerably. However, some of the disorders that might be considered in the differential diagnosis ( Box 29.4 ) are associated with other prominent symptoms outside of the peripheral nervous system, some of which involve the central nervous system or have an onset in early childhood. From a practical point of view, the differential diagnosis of an isolated chronic demyelinating polyneuropathy in an adult without central nervous system or systemic findings likely is limited to either an inherited polyneuropathy (most often CMT type 1A) or CIDP or one of its related disorders. NCSs can often differentiate among these conditions.
Demonstrate at least three of the following in motor nerves:
Prolonged DLs (two or more nerves, not at entrapment sites)
DL >130% ULN
CV slowing (two or more nerves, not across entrapment sites)
CV <75% LLN
Prolonged late responses: F response and H reflexes (one or more nerves)
>130% ULN
( Note : If distal CMAP amplitude is very low, absent F waves may not be abnormal.)
Conduction block/temporal dispersion (one or more nerves)
Unequivocal conduction block: proximal/distal CMAP area ratio <0.50
Possible conduction block: proximal/distal CMAP amplitude ratio <0.70
Temporal dispersion: proximal/distal CMAP duration ratio >1.15
( Note : These criteria are modified for inherited demyelinating polyneuropathy. At least two of the first three need to be demonstrated. Conduction block/temporal dispersion does not occur in inherited demyelinating polyneuropathies. One exception to this rule occurs in the severe demyelinating neuropathy of infancy and early childhood. This neuropathy was historically known in the literature as Dejerine-Sottas syndrome, or formerly CMT3. In these patients, the neuropathy is associated with such profound conduction velocity slowing [typically <10 m/s], and there is often prominent temporal dispersion and phase cancellation resulting in dispersed, lower amplitude waveforms with proximal stimulation; however, the area does not drop >50% between distal and proximal stimulation sites.)
CMT is a group of genetic neuropathies that is comprised of several major types based on inheritance pattern (dominant, recessive, or X-linked) and whether the primary pathology is in the myelin or axon:
CMT1 is dominant and demyelinating
CMT2 is dominant and axonal
CMT4 is recessive and demyelinating
CMTX is X-linked and demyelinating
Each of these CMT types is further divided based on when they were discovered and their specific molecular and genetic findings. a
a One might ask why there is no CMT3 type. CMT3 formerly existed in the CMT nomenclature, designated as Dejerine-Sottas syndrome. This is a severe demyelinating neuropathy that usually presents in infancy with marked hypotonia and absent reflexes. On NCS, conduction velocities are the slowest ever recorded in humans with standard surface electrodes, typically in the 6 m/s range. CMT3 was dropped from the nomenclature when it was discovered that most patients with Dejerine-Sottas had different point mutations in the PMP22 and MPZ genes, the same genes responsible for CMT1A and CMT1B.
These CMT subtypes are designated by adding a letter designation following the type of CMT (e.g., CMT1A, CMT1B, etc.). More than 80 different genes and loci associated with CMT have been identified, and the list continues to grow. The most common type is CMT1, which accounts for approximately 40%–50% of all patients with CMT. CMT1 comprises a group of demyelinating neuropathies, is among the most common demyelinating neuropathies seen in the EMG laboratory, and is by far the most common inherited demyelinating neuropathy. In the past, CMT1 was referred to in the literature as hereditary motor sensory neuropathy type I, peroneal muscular atrophy, and hypertrophic or onion-bulb neuropathy of childhood. CMTX comprises a group of X-linked demyelinating neuropathies that account for approximately 10%–15% of patients with CMT. Rarely, females present with milder symptoms. Lastly, CMT4 encompasses a group of autosomal recessive demyelinating neuropathies which are rarely encountered clinically.
CMT is a slowly progressive, distal, motor more than sensory, neuropathy associated with pes cavus and hammer toes. Scoliosis and other skeletal deformities occur in some patients. The demyelinating types are CMT1, CMT4, and CMTX and may be associated with hypertrophic nerves. Sensory symptoms are uncommon, although mild sensory signs are usually discovered with careful examination. There are no cranial nerve signs in the more common CMT1 and CMTX phenotypes. CMT predominantly affects the intrinsic foot and lower leg anterior compartment musculature resulting in the typical appearance of distal leg wasting. The distal weakness often results in prominent foot drops and a steppage gait. Later, the impairment spreads to the distal thighs and intrinsic hand muscles. Claw hands may develop. Ankle reflexes are always absent, and, in well-established cases, all reflexes are unobtainable. The onset is commonly in early childhood, typically presenting as a foot deformity or delay in achievement of motor milestones. Other patients may present in the first decades of life. Some patients are affected so minimally, however, that they may not come to medical attention until middle age or later.
The genetics of the demyelinating CMT types are heterogeneous. In CMT1, the inheritance is autosomal dominant. At present, there are six subtypes of CMT1 (CMT1A, 1B, 1C, 1D, 1E, and 1F). The most common form is CMT1A, which accounts for approximately 70%–80% of all CMT1 cases. The genetic defect is a duplication error of a 1.5-megabase DNA region at chromosome 17p11.2. This region contains the peripheral myelin protein gene PMP22. This is the same gene location at which a deletion error results in hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP) (see later). Isolated patients without any family history have been found to have the same duplication, implying that some cases may be due to a de novo mutation. The second most common CMT1 is CMT1B, which accounts for approximately 10% of patients with CMT1. CMT1B is caused by a point mutation in the myelin protein zero (MPZ) gene on chromosome 1. The other CMT1 subtypes are extremely rare, each representing less than 1% of patients with CMT1. Although the phenotypic differences between families with CMT1A and CMT1B are small, among large groups, patients with CMTIB are found to be affected earlier and more severely than patients with type IA and have slower conduction velocities. DNA testing for the common CMT1 subtypes is widely commercially available.
CMT4, the autosomal recessive demyelinating type, is very rare. In contrast, CMTX, the X-linked form, is more common and occasionally seen in the EMG laboratory. The genetic defect in the most common form of CMTX, CMTX1, is a mutation of the gap-junction protein 1 gene (GJB1) , which codes for connexin-32. Connexin-32 is important in forming the gap junctions in myelin at the paranodal regions.
The cerebrospinal fluid protein level is elevated in more than half of all patients with the demyelinating forms of CMT. The pathology of peripheral nerve shows segmental demyelination and Schwann cell proliferation with onion-bulb formation. Unmyelinated fibers are not affected. Imaging of the lumbar spine may show enlargement of the lumbosacral nerve roots and, in exceptional cases, may result in spinal stenosis.
The prognosis in many cases is relatively benign. Although rare patients eventually may require a wheelchair, most remain ambulatory with the use of bracing with mild to moderate impairment of functional strength.
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