Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8283327 | Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2009 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
To develop diagnostic criteria for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP), a retrospective series of patients' records diagnosed by sexpert consensus as CIDP or other chronic polyneuropathies were analyzed. Classification and regression tree analysis was applied to 150 patients to derive a classification rule. According to the rule, diagnosis of CIDP required that a patient have a chronic non-genetic polyneuropathy, progressive for at least eight weeks, without a serum paraprotein and either 1) recordable compound muscle action potentials in â¥Â 75% of motor nerves and either abnormal distal latency in > 50% of nerves or abnormal motor conduction velocity in > 50% of nerves or abnormal F wave latency in > 50% of nerves; or 2) symmetrical onset of motor symptoms, symmetrical weakness of four limbs, and proximal weakness in â¥Â 1 limb. When validated in 117 patients, the rule had 83% sensitivity (95% confidence interval 69%-93%) and 97% specificity (95% confidence interval 89%-99%) and performed better than published criteria.
Keywords
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Authors
C.L. Koski, M. Baumgarten, L.S. Magder, R.J. Barohn, J. Goldstein, M. Graves, K. Gorson, A.F. Hahn, R.A.C. Hughes, J. Katz, R.A. Lewis, G.J. Parry, P. van Doorn, D.R. Cornblath,