Study of clinical profile and prognosis in various subtypes of guillain barre syndrome patients


Original Article

Author Details : Tarun Kumar Ralot*, Sanjay Parmar, Rohitash Gujar, Shibsankar Sarkar, Hemlata Meghwal

Volume : 4, Issue : 4, Year : 2018

Article Page : 204-208

https://doi.org/10.18231/2455-8451.2018.0047



Suggest article by email

Get Permission

Abstract

Guillain-Barré syndrome is a post infective polyradiculoneuropathy having heterogenous clinical presentation and various subtypes like acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, acute motor-sensory axonal neuropathy, acute motor axonal neuropathy, pure sensory variant and Miller Fisher syndrome. A prospective study was carried out in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome admitted to the RNT Medical College & attached Hospital to determine the electrophysiological subtypes and their prognosis in relation to various subtypes, clinical features and treatment. A total of 100 patients was enrolled. In the final analysis there were 74% male and the mean age was 30.4 years. Clinically 97% patients had quadriparesis, 2% had paraparesis and one cases had bibrachial involvement. Cranial nerves and respiratory involvement were seen in 25% and 24% cases respectively. Electrophysiologically the most common type of GBS was AIDP (43%) followed by AMAN (34%) and AMSAN (23%). The prognosis was assessed at one month and found that there was complete recovery in 32% cases and residual weakness in 63% cases. Death occurred in 5% cases because of respiratory involvement


How to cite : Ralot T K, Parmar S, Gujar R, Sarkar S, Meghwal H, Study of clinical profile and prognosis in various subtypes of guillain barre syndrome patients. IP Indian J Neurosci 2018;4(4):204-208


This is an Open Access (OA) journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.







View Article

PDF File  


Copyright permission

Get article permission for commercial use

Downlaod

PDF File    


Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

Article DOI

https://doi.org/ 10.18231/2455-8451.2018.0047


Article Metrics






Article Access statistics

Viewed: 1997

PDF Downloaded: 619