Volume 30, Issue 4 pp. 433-436
Main Articles

Acute multiple cranial neuropathy: A variant of Guillain–Barré syndrome?

Rong-Kuo Lyu MD

Corresponding Author

Rong-Kuo Lyu MD

Department of Neurology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and University Medical College, 199 Tung Hwa North Road, Taipei, Taiwan

Department of Neurology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and University Medical College, 199 Tung Hwa North Road, Taipei, TaiwanSearch for more papers by this author
Sien-Tsong Chen MD

Sien-Tsong Chen MD

Department of Neurology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital and University Medical College, 199 Tung Hwa North Road, Taipei, Taiwan

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 15 September 2004
Citations: 25

Abstract

Three patients with acute multiple cranial neuropathy following benign infectious disease are reported. Complete or partial ophthalmoplegia, as well as facial and bulbar dysfunction, were noted in all. Cranial nerve involvement was bilateral. Other neurological deficits included sensory loss in two patients and transiently reduced tendon reflexes in the left arm in one. One patient had positive serum anti-GQ1b immunoglobulin G antibody during the acute phase of the illness. The cerebrospinal fluid had a normal cell count in all three patients, with raised protein concentrations in two. Electrophysiological evaluation showed peripheral nerve dysfunction in two patients. All three patients improved either spontaneously or coincident with immunotherapy. Our patients had many clinical features resembling those of typical Guillain–Barré syndrome (GBS), and hence their disorder may represent a regional variant, that is, a cranial form, of GBS. This form of GBS accounted for 5% of the GBS patient population in our series. Muscle Nerve 30: 433–436, 2004

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