Cryoglobulinemic peripheral neuropathy in hepatitis C virus infection: clinical and anatomical correlations of 22 cases

Cryoglobulinemic neuropathies caused by hepatitis C virus are frequent and may have severe clinical outcomes. The aim of this study was to clarify the clinical and anatomical correlations of these neuropathies. Between 1992 and 2007, 22 consecutive patients with cryoglobulinemic neuropathies caused...

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Veröffentlicht in:Revue neurologique 2010-05, Vol.166 (5), p.509-514
Hauptverfasser: Taieb, G, Maisonobe, T, Musset, L, Cacoub, P, Léger, J-M, Bouche, P
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Sprache:fre
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Zusammenfassung:Cryoglobulinemic neuropathies caused by hepatitis C virus are frequent and may have severe clinical outcomes. The aim of this study was to clarify the clinical and anatomical correlations of these neuropathies. Between 1992 and 2007, 22 consecutive patients with cryoglobulinemic neuropathies caused by hepatitis C virus were retrospectively included. Patients were evaluated clinically, electrophysiologically and underwent a neuromuscular biopsy. The group of patients with vasculitis on nerve biopsy was compared with the group without vasculitis. All the neuropathies were axonal with 11 polyneuropathies and 11 mononeuropathies multiplex. The seven patients with medium-sized vasculitis on the nerve biopsy presented an acute sensorimotor mononeuropathy multiplex in six cases (85%), with ischemic conduction block in three cases (42%) and wallerian degeneration in four cases (57%). Among the four patients with small-sized vasculitis, two had a mononeuropathy multiplex (50%) without conduction block (0%) and with wallerian degeneration in one case (25%). The 11 patients without vasculitis (nine lymphocytic perivascular infiltrates and two non inflammatory biopsies) had a polyneuropathy in eight cases (72%) without conduction block and wallerian degeneration (0%). The type of neuropathy was different in the group of patients with vasculitis compared with the group without vasculitis. The neuropathies with vasculitis were significantly different with more frequent mononeuropathies multiplex (p
ISSN:0035-3787
DOI:10.1016/j.neurol.2009.10.019