Kramarz Caroline, Masingue Marion, Bouhour Françoise, Vial Christophe, Latour Philippe, Vandendries Christophe, Maisonobe Thierry, Coebergh Jan, Blake Julian, Reilly Mary M, Stojkovic Tanya, Rossor Alexander M
Department of Neuromuscular Diseases, Queen Square UCL Institute of Neurology and National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK.
Reference Center for Neuromuscular Disorders, Nord/Est/Ile de France, Institut de Myologie, CHU La Pitié-Salpêtrière, APHP, Paris, France.
J Peripher Nerv Syst. 2025 Jun;30(2):e70033. doi: 10.1111/jns.70033.
Peripheral neuropathy may present with a variety of phenotypes depending on the pattern of weakness and sensory loss, the neurophysiological characteristics (axonal or demyelinating) and additional features such as involvement of the autonomic nervous system or the cranial nerves. The most common phenotype is a symmetrical length-dependent sensory and motor neuropathy. Other phenotypes include non-length-dependent forms such as chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) or a sensory neuronopathy or ganglionopathy. Asymmetric forms of neuropathy are mostly represented by mononeuritis multiplex and Lewis-Sumner syndrome or focal CIDP. Unilateral weakness or sensory loss respecting the midline is mainly due to pathology in the central nervous system and is unusual in peripheral neuropathy.
We evaluated the clinical and genetic features of three unrelated individuals with a peripheral neuropathy affecting one side of the body.
We describe three unrelated patients (two female and one male) with a slowly progressive peripheral neuropathy restricted to one side of the body. Each case is marked by onset in early childhood with the absence of a family history or a structural lesion of the central nervous system. Neurophysiology demonstrated an axonal type of neuropathy in two cases and conduction slowing supportive of a demyelinating neuropathy type in one. Genetic testing was performed in the three cases, specifically looking for variants in genes associated with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) but none were identified in DNA extracted from blood.
A unilateral, slowly progressive peripheral neuropathy is a rare phenomenon, and we propose the cause of this unusual phenotype to be due to a mosaic or chimeric form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT).
根据肌无力和感觉丧失的模式、神经生理学特征(轴索性或脱髓鞘性)以及自主神经系统或颅神经受累等其他特征,周围神经病可能呈现多种表型。最常见的表型是对称性长度依赖性感觉和运动神经病。其他表型包括非长度依赖性形式,如慢性炎症性脱髓鞘性多发性神经根神经病(CIDP)或感觉神经元病或神经节病。神经病的不对称形式主要表现为多发性单神经炎和Lewis-Sumner综合征或局灶性CIDP。单侧肌无力或感觉丧失且中线不受累主要是由于中枢神经系统病变,在周围神经病中并不常见。
我们评估了三名患有单侧周围神经病的无关个体的临床和遗传特征。
我们描述了三名无关患者(两名女性和一名男性),他们患有局限于身体一侧的缓慢进展性周围神经病。每例病例的特点是发病于儿童早期,无家族史或中枢神经系统结构性病变。神经生理学检查显示,两例为轴索性神经病,一例传导减慢支持脱髓鞘性神经病类型。对这三例患者进行了基因检测,特别查找与夏科-马里-图思病(CMT)相关基因的变异,但从血液中提取的DNA未发现任何变异。
单侧缓慢进展性周围神经病是一种罕见现象,我们认为这种不寻常表型的原因是夏科-马里-图思病(CMT)的镶嵌或嵌合形式。