Very early Guillain-Barré syndrome: A clinical-electrophysiological and ultrasonographic study

•Subtype classification of very early Guillain-Barré syndrome often requires serial electrodiagnosis.•Nerve ultrasonography helps delineate the topography of changes.•Proximal nerve trunk changes are a very relevant feature in early stages of the disease. Using recent optimized electrodiagnostic cri...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical neurophysiology practice 2020-01, Vol.5, p.1-9
Hauptverfasser: Berciano, José, Orizaola, Pedro, Gallardo, Elena, Pelayo-Negro, Ana L., Sánchez-Juan, Pascual, Infante, Jon, Sedano, María J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Subtype classification of very early Guillain-Barré syndrome often requires serial electrodiagnosis.•Nerve ultrasonography helps delineate the topography of changes.•Proximal nerve trunk changes are a very relevant feature in early stages of the disease. Using recent optimized electrodiagnostic criteria sets, we primarily aimed at verifying the accuracy of the initial electrophysiological test in very early Guillain-Barré syndrome (VEGBS), ≤4 days of onset, compared with the results of serial electrophysiology. Our secondary objective was to correlate early electrophysiological results with sonographic nerve changes. This is a retrospective study based on consecutive VEGBS patients admitted to the hospital. Each patient had serial nerve conduction studies (NCS) in at least 4 nerves. Initial NCS were done within 4 days after onset, and serial ones from the second week onwards. Electrophysiological recordings of each case were re-evaluated, GBS subtype being established accordingly. Nerve ultrasonography was almost always performed within 2 weeks after onset. Fifteen adult VEGBS patients were identified with a mean age of 57.8 years. At first NCS, VEGBS sub-typing was only possible in 3 (20%) cases that showed an axonal pattern, the remaining patterns being mixed (combining axonal and demyelinating features) in 6 (40%), equivocal in 5 (33.3%), and normal in 1 (6.7%). Upon serial NCS, 7 (46.7%) cases were categorized as acute demyelinating polyneuropathy, 7 (46.7%) as axonal GBS, and 1 (6.6%) as unclassified syndrome. Antiganglioside reactivity was detected in 5 out of the 7 axonal cases. Nerve US showed that lesions mainly involved the ventral rami of scanned cervical nerves. Serial electrophysiological evaluation is necessary for accurate VEGBS subtype classification. Ultrasonography helps delineate the topography of nerve changes. We provide new VEGBS pathophysiological insights into nerve conduction alterations within the first 4 days of the clinical course.
ISSN:2467-981X
2467-981X
DOI:10.1016/j.cnp.2019.11.003