Abstract

Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) is a heterogeneous syndrome that has several variants. Although they share macrophage-associated demyelination, clinical, neurophysiological, and pathological investigations have demonstrated that each subtype has a different pathophysiology. Multifocal CIDP exhibits a chronic course with asymmetrical symptoms. Its neurophysiological significance involves multifocal demyelination at intermediate nerve sites. Distal CIDP has a prolonged chronic course, presenting sensory and motor symptoms in a length-dependent manner. Furthermore, it frequently coexists with IgG M proteinemia or other hematologic disorders. Motor CIDP displays symmetric muscle weakness similar to typical CIDP but lacks sensory involvement. Often, motor CIDP is associated with malignancy or inflammatory diseases. Although acute deterioration after corticosteroid therapy in patients with motor CIDP is well-known, the available evidence to support this is limited.

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