| Literature DB >> 34173874 |
Emanuele Spina1, Pietro Emiliano Doneddu2, Giuseppe Liberatore2, Dario Cocito3, Raffaella Fazio4, Chiara Briani5, Massimiliano Filosto6, Luana Benedetti7,8, Giovanni Antonini9, Giuseppe Cosentino10,11, Stefano Jann12, Anna Mazzeo13, Andrea Cortese11,14, Girolama Alessandra Marfia15, Angelo Maurizio Clerici16, Gabriele Siciliano17, Marinella Carpo18, Marco Luigetti19,20, Giuseppe Lauria21,22, Tiziana Rosso23, Guido Cavaletti24, Erdita Peci3, Stefano Tronci4, Marta Ruiz5, Stefano Cotti Piccinelli6, Angelo Schenone7, Luca Leonardi9, Luca Gentile13, Laura Piccolo11, Giorgia Mataluni15, Lucio Santoro25, Eduardo Nobile-Orazio2,26, Fiore Manganelli25.
Abstract
Compression of the median nerve at the carpal tunnel can give demyelinating features and result in distal motor latency (DML) prolongation fulfilling the EFNS/PNS demyelinating criteria for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP). Accordingly, being carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS) common in the general population, the EFNS/PNS guidelines recommend excluding the DML of the median nerve when DML prolongation may be consistent with median neuropathy at the wrist from CTS. The main aims of this study were to verify whether the inclusion of DML of the median nerve (when consistent with CTS) could improve electrophysiological diagnostic accuracy for CIDP and if the median nerve at the carpal tunnel was more prone to demyelination. We analyzed electrophysiological data from 499 patients included consecutively into the Italian CIDP Database. According to the EFNS/PNS criteria, 352 patients had a definite, 10 a probable, and 57 a possible diagnosis of CIDP, while 80 were not fulfilling the diagnostic criteria. The inclusion of DML prolongation of median nerve did not improve significantly the diagnostic accuracy for CIDP; overall diagnostic class changed in 6 out of 499 patients (1.2%) and electrodiagnostic class of CIDP changed from not fulfilling to possible in only 2 patients (2.5% of not-fulfilling patients). In conclusion, we can infer that excluding DML prolongation of median nerve does not increase the risk of missing a diagnosis of CIDP thus corroborating the current EFNS/PNS criteria.Entities:
Keywords: CIDP; Carpal tunnel syndrome; Demyelination; Diagnostic accuracy; Neurophysiology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34173874 PMCID: PMC8782796 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-021-10672-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 6.682
Different frequencies of patient allocation in CIDP diagnostic classes considering and not considering electrophysiological criterion of prolonged DML (≥ 50% of upper limit of normal) of the median nerve consistent with CTS
| Standard EFNS/PNS criteria (%) | EFNS/PNS criteria with prolonged DML of the median nerve included (%) | Significance* | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definite | 352/499 (70.6) | 356/499 (71.4) | |
| Probable | 10/499 (2) | 10/499 (2) | |
| Possible | 57/499 (11.4) | 55/499 (11) | |
| Not fulfilling | 80/499 (16) | 78/499 (15.6) |
CTS carpal tunnel syndrome, DML distal motor latency
*Chi-square test for multiple proportion comparison