Volume 11, Issue 7 pp. 769-774
Article
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Prognostic value of electrodiagnosis in Guillain-Barré syndrome

Dr. Robert G. Miller MD

Corresponding Author

Dr. Robert G. Miller MD

Department of Neurology, Children's Hospital of San Francisco and University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California

Department of Neurology, Children's Hospital of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA 94119Search for more papers by this author
Dr. Gordon W. Peterson MD

Dr. Gordon W. Peterson MD

Loma Linda University, Loma Linda, California

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Dr. Jasper R. Daube MD

Dr. Jasper R. Daube MD

The Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

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Dr. James W. Albers MD

Dr. James W. Albers MD

University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

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First published: July 1988
Citations: 82

Abstract

This study was designed to identify clinical and electrodiagnostic indicators of prognosis in Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). Sixty severe GBS patients (all bedfast, 22 ventilator dependent) were analyzed clinically and with standard electromyography and nerve conduction studies. Both ventilator dependence and rapid evolution of weakness were more common in patients with a poor prognosis. The most powerful predictor of a poor outcome was reduced mean compound muscle action potential amplitude (less than 10% of the lower limit of normal).

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