GBS, Guillian Barre syndrome

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Clinic

  • GBS presents with ascending paralysis and areflexia
  • Often secondary to an infection which leads to acute polyneuropathy.
  • GBS is an Acute / Subacute, relatively symmetric lower motor neuron paralysis
  • Up to 85% of patients obtain a full or functional recovery
  • It is a neurologic emergency in which patients are subject to respiratory failure and cardiac arrhythmias in 15%
  • Autonomic nervous system problems may lead heart rate and blood pressure.
  • Mortality rate: 7.5%
  • The level of consciousness is normally unaffected in GBS, but Bickerstaff brainstem encephalitis subtype may feature drowsiness, sleepiness, or coma.


Signs / Symptoms

  • Numbness / Tingling / Pain
  • Bilateral / Symmetric Weakness of the legs and arms that worsens over time.
  • Face / Eye /Neck Muscles may also be affected
  • Swallowing difficulties
  • Paraplegia / Paraparesis (8%)
  • Bladder / Anus: (27.7% have urinary dysfunction, including urinary retention in 9.2%)
  • Gait problems

Types

GBS Hypo Reflexia Diplopia/

Bilateral ophthalmoplegia

AIDP +++
MFS +++
AMAN
Bickerstaff brainstem encephalitis
Acute motor sensory axonal neuropathy
Acute panautonomic neuropathy
CMV, RBS SHBV

2 Entities:

  • Paresthesia
  • Face - Palsy
  • Esophagus  - Dysphagia
  • Extremities - Paralysis
  • Extremities - Paraplegia
  • Heart - Arrythmia

3 Clinical Features

  • The most common initial symptom of GBS is acroparesthesia with little objective sensory loss
  • Severe Radicular back pain or neuropathic pain affects most cases.
  • Weakness commonly in a symmetric “ascending pattern”.
  • Most patients present initially with Leg and Arm weakness (32%) or selective proximal and distal leg weakness (56%) often spreading to the arm while some have onset of weakness in the arms (12%)
  • Besides prominent weakness, patients are Hypo reflexia / Areflexic within the first few days but this may be delayed by up to a week.
  • Weakness can be somewhat asymmetric, and sensory loss can also be variable, rarely presenting with a pseudo-sensory level suggesting myelopathy.
  • Facial nerve involvement occurs in up to 70% of cases
  • Dysphagia in 40%
  • 5% patients may develop Ophthalmoplegia, Ptosis
  • Hearing loss, papilledema and vocal cord paralysis are less common.
  • Dysautonomia affects most patients and consists most commonly of sinus tachycardia, but patients may experience bradycardia, labile blood pressure with hyper- and hypotension, orthostatic hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias, neurogenic pulmonary edema, changes in sweat.
Entities

Miasms

SHBV VZV CMV MMP EBV RBS CXA, B, ECHO HBV
Dysestheia +++
Radiculopathy +++
Loss of deep tendone reflex +++
Face, Palsy +++ +++ +++
Dysphagia +++ +++
Ophtalmoplegia +++
Choking sensation +++
Papiloedema +++ +++
Deafness +++ +++ +++
Orthostatic Hypotention +++
Sympathetic hyperactivity +++

Note that Miller Fisher syndrome miasm is SHBV due to theses entities: Diplopia + Incoordination + GBS [1]

  1. Koski CL, Guillain-Barré syndrome. Neurol Clin. 1984 May;2(2):355-66