Acta myologica : myopathies and cardiomyopathies : official journal of the Mediterranean Society of Myology / edited by the Gaetano Conte Academy for the study of striated muscle diseases
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Chronic Immune Dysschwannian/Dysneuronal Polyneuropathy is an autoimmune peripheral-nerve and/or nerve-root disorder known to usually respond to intravenous immunoglobulin-G treatment. Benefit can involve any combination of motor-nerve fibers and large and small sensory-nerve fibers responsible for a progressively crippling, unbalancing, discomforting or painful disorder. "Diabetic neuropathy" is commonly considered untreatable. However, 81% of my 48 recently-summarized type-2 diabetes patients with polyneuropathy, adequately-treated with intravenous immunoglobulin-G, off-label, were relieved, sometimes completely, of various motor and sensory symptoms, including pain, thereby resembling Chronic Immune Dysschwannian/Dysneuronal Polyneuropathy. ⋯ Accordingly, Chronic Immune Dysschwannian/Dysneuronal Polyneuropathy patients having a strong type-2 diabetes genetic background are designated "genetico-diabetoid-2 neuropathy" prior to their manifesting type-2 diabetes. Intravenous immunoglobulin-G is herein suggested as a treatment for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, a recent, and feared-repetitive, pandemic with many fatalities caused by a highly-contagious mutant coronavirus, for which there is no definitive treatment. Intravenous immunoglobulin-G might: a) combat a dysimmune component of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome, including the reactive cytokine-chemokine storm against respiratory tissues; b) contain some antibodies effective against the coronavirus non-specific components of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome; c) block host-cell receptors for the virus; and d) counteract secondary infections.