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COVID‐19–associated Guillain‐Barré syndrome: The early pandemic experience
Author(s) -
Caress James B.,
Castoro Ryan J.,
Simmons Zachary,
Scelsa Stephen N.,
Lewis Richard A.,
Ahlawat Aditi,
Narayanaswami Pushpa
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
muscle and nerve
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.025
H-Index - 145
eISSN - 1097-4598
pISSN - 0148-639X
DOI - 10.1002/mus.27024
Subject(s) - guillain barre syndrome , medicine , polyradiculoneuropathy , covid-19 , pandemic , incidence (geometry) , coronavirus , severity of illness , pediatrics , disease , immunology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , physics , optics
Guillain‐Barré syndrome (GBS) is an inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathy associated with numerous viral infections. Recently, there have been many case reports describing the association between coronavirus disease‐2019 (COVID‐19) and GBS, but much remains unknown about the strength of the association and the features of GBS in this setting. We reviewed 37 published cases of GBS associated with COVID‐19 to summarize this information for clinicians and to determine whether a specific clinical or electrodiagnostic (EDx) pattern is emerging. The mean age (59 years), gender (65% male), and COVID‐19 features appeared to reflect those of hospitalized COVID‐19 patients early in the pandemic. The mean time from COVID‐19 symptoms to GBS symptoms was 11 days. The clinical presentation and severity of these GBS cases was similar to those with non–COVID‐19 GBS. The EDx pattern was considered demyelinating in approximately half of the cases. Cerebrospinal fluid, when assessed, demonstrated albuminocytologic dissociation in 76% of patients and was negative for severe acute respiratory distress syndrome–coronavirus‐2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) in all cases. Serum antiganglioside antibodies were absent in 15 of 17 patients tested. Most patients were treated with a single course of intravenous immunoglobulin, and improvement was noted within 8 weeks in most cases. GBS‐associated COVID‐19 appears to be an uncommon condition with similar clinical and EDx patterns to GBS before the pandemic. Future studies should compare patients with COVID‐19–associated GBS to those with contemporaneous non–COVID‐19 GBS and determine whether the incidence of GBS is elevated in those with COVID‐19.