These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: [Peripheral neuropathy with mixed cryoglobulinemia].
    Author: Manganelli P, Pavesi G, Fiocchi A, Gemignani F, Ferraccioli G, Nervetti A, Marbini A.
    Journal: Recenti Prog Med; 1990 Nov; 81(11):681-5. PubMed ID: 1962889.
    Abstract:
    Among 54 patients with mixed cryoglobulinemia a peripheral neuropathy was demonstrated in 23 patients (42.6%). Five patients had a secondary form while the majority (18) had essential cryoglobulinemia. The immunoglobulin components were polyclonal in 5 cases, only present in trace amounts in 5 and of type II in 13 patients. Fifteen patients had symptoms of polyneuropathy, but in 18 cases the symptomatology had symmetrical features and in two cases asymmetrical characteristics. In 8 patients a mono-polyneuropathy was observed. The most significant electrophysiological finding was the decreased amplitude of the sensory action potential of the sural nerve, which we observed in 95% of the instances, whereas a decreased sensory conduction velocity was seen in 8/23 cases only. A biopsy of the sural nerve, performed in eleven cases, always showed abnormal epi- and endoneurial vessels. Epineurial vessel vasculitis was found in 4 cases and fibrous thickening of the vessel wall in two cases. Endothelial swelling of the endoneurial vessels was observed in 7 patients and luminal obliteration in 3 samples. Axonal degeneration demonstrated in 7 of the 11 processed sample tissues was the main pathological finding. Signs of de/remyelination were associated in 3 cases, and were the dominant lesions in a single specimen. The simultaneous biopsy of the peroneus brevis muscle showed signs of denervation in all samples, vasculitis in 7 cases and deposits of filaments plus annular bodies of the vessel wall in 2 samples. All these data support the hypothesis that ischaemic damage may be the final common pathway of the majority of peripheral neuropathies in mixed cryoglobulinemia patients.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]