Abstract

Autoimmune neuropathies are classified, on the basis of pathophysiology, as demyelinating or axonal. The term nodo-paranodopathy, introduced in 2013 to better categorize the neuropathies with antiganglioside antibodies and later expanded to include neuropathies with antibodies to nodal and paranodal axoglial complexes, characterizes disorders in which the nodal region is critical in the pathogenesis. These neuropathies, although presenting electrophysiologic demyelinating features do not show pathologic evidence of segmental demyelination, or, although being classified as axonal, can show reversible nerve conduction failure and rapid recovery contrary with the communal concept of an axonal neuropathy. In this personal view is reported, with a splitting approach, an update on autoimmune nodo-paranodopathies, classified according to the domains of peripheral nerve fiber, the target antigens and the antibody class and subclass involved. The clinical features, the electrophysiologic findings, the results of the immunopathological and ultrastructural studies, the pathophysiology and treatment are also described. The nodo-paranodopathy category integrates the clinical classification of autoimmune neuropathies and expands the traditional dichotomous demyelinating and axonal classification. It helps to a better systematization pointing to the domain and target antigens of the autoimmune process, it resolves conflicting pathologic and electrophysiologic findings, reconciles the contradiction that axonal neuropathies may be rapidly reversible, avoids taxonomical confusion and possible misdiagnoses. Finally this categorization, through the identification of the specific antibody and its prevalent class and subclass, clarifies the pathophysiological mechanisms and addresses to a more targeted therapeutic approach.

Full Text
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