We report a 25-year-old woman, six weeks pregnant, who presented to the clinic with a 3-day history of paresthesia involving both limbs, which progressed to difficulty walking and left-leg buckling. She had experienced similar episodes in the past, including transient diplopia. Examination revealed a predominantly proximal weakness of the left leg with an extensor plantar response, a sign of upper motor neuron involvement. Nerve conduction studies indicated peripheral demyelination with severely reduced conduction velocities, absent SNAPs, and prolonged F waves. MRI of the brain showed several focal T2/FLAIR hyperintense lesions. The cervical and thoracic spines also showed multiple short-segment T2-hyperintense lesions suggestive of central demyelination. Antibody testing was negative for aquaporin-4, anti-MOG, and oligoclonal bands, but ELISA-based assays were positive for Neurofascin-140 and sulfatide IgM antibodies. These findings pointed to an immune process targeting the nodo-paranodal region. She was diagnosed with combined central and peripheral demyelination and received pulse corticosteroids. She showed full clinical recovery and is under follow-up in the clinic, with rituximab planned as maintenance therapy postpartum.