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Guillain Barre Syndrome

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Uploaded by on May 22, 2007

I picked up that next chart and saw the chief complaint was rash after taking prednisone. Sounded straight forward. The patient was a 16 year old female who looked like she was feeling fine and with no visible rash when I walked in the room. Her mother told me that after taking the prednisone she broke out in hives and so they gave her Benadryl, and now the rash was gone. Great, I thought, I love it when patients treat themselves appropriately. Nothing left for me to do but give her my blessing to go home. She looked fine and had a negative physical exam while laying on the gurney. On my way out the door I asked the patient's mother the reason she was taking Prednisone, was it because she has been have some type of recurrent rash? "No", she answered, "It is because she can't move." That stopped me in my tracks. Can't move? What does that mean? This question lead me down the rabbit hole. It turns out that the patient started having symptoms 2 weeks ago with extremity tingling and neck pain. She was seen in the ER and had neck x-rays which were negative and then followed up with her doctor and had an out patient MRI of her neck that was negative. She had her symptoms progress to weakness and cramping pain in her extremities. It did not seem to her that her symptoms were ascending but seemed to involve the proximal muscles of her hips and shoulders more then the distal muscles. The mother also told me that sometimes she would get facial symptoms with drooping eye lids or slurred speech. She told me that the longer she is up doing something the stronger she feels (as opposed to Myasthenia Gravis—where patients get weaker with repetitive movements) Her doctor started her on prednisone to see if it would help her symptoms because according to the mother he was worried that her symptoms were being caused by a virus.
Her physical exam showed proximal muscle (MM) weakness. She could not sit up on her own, but once she was standing she could walk—but was somewhat off balance. She had to swing her legs around to the outside when she walked because of hip flexor weakness. Her cranial nerves were all intact except she had symmetric facial MM weakness and could not smile or puff out her checks. She could not smile or raise her eyebrows. Her reflexes were present 1+ hard to elicit bilateral biceps reflexes and 1-2+ bilateral patella reflexes. The interesting thing about her patella reflexes is that it seemed that there was a delay between when I would strike her knee and when it would move. It seemed to respond slowly. Almost the opposite effect of reflexes in severe hypothyroidism (where there is a delay in the relaxation phase). I could not get ankle reflexes.
It turned out that this patient did in fact have Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS). She had a high protein on her CSF tap during her hospitalization and was treated with IV IG. I thought that this would be a great opportunity to review Guillain-Barre and how it can present in children.

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  • certain vaccines and viruses can cause this condition

  • u get this from the flu vaccine

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  • You don't just get this from the flu vaccine. That's generalizing the cause of the disease a lot.

  • I am 14 and when I was 12 I had GBS, the doctor took ageeesssss to diagnose me, I wish they saw this video taht is everything I had :'-( my problem is the health system in Perth WA is absolutley crap, and they are worried about money, I never had a spinal tap done until I was completely paralysed and almost becoming better, the doctor didnt believe anything I said and she though I was "mental" for not being able to move as GBS here is uncommon, you certainly dont seem like that you are nice x!

  • @logicCplusplus I'm no Dr. but I had this terrible disease, in fact I'm in recovery now, but if you had GBS for that long a period without treatment you would probably not be around. there are several ways of determining GBS such as a spinal tap and an EMG. Good luck

  • @alexzracer2008

    part2: in Some cases this infection before the GBS is the viral flu and so possibly also acitvated by the flu shot. The were some very rare cases in which people got GBS after a flu vacc, but that doesn't necessarily mean that its caused by that.

  • @alexzracer2008

    It's an autoimmune disease, that means the body'S immune system attacks certain parts of the nerval system. Acute auto immune diseases are (often) triggered by an foreign particles like viruses or bacteria that have similarties to other proteins that are contained in nerve structures (At least that is the theory). In this Case, people with guiliain barre syndrome hat an infection in the time before the start of the illness (typically with the bacteria Campilobacter j.)

  • I have this now, the syndrome itself isn't as bad as the weakness it left behind. It nearly killed me =/

  • @luvddz why is it that the flu vaccine gives people this?

  • my brother, suddenly lose feelings in his left arm.. then his right arm and then both legs in a matter of 15 minutes and is completely paralyzed from the neck down. and bust out on tears due to the pain.. he is 20 and never cries like that.. they did test for 10 hours and only found that the spinal tap was high in protein.. do u think its GBS?

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