TY - JOUR
T1 - Acute Paralytic Syndrome in Three American Men
T2 - Comparison with Chinese Cases
AU - Jackson, Carlayne E.
AU - Barohn, Richard J.
AU - Mendell, Jerry R.
PY - 1993/7
Y1 - 1993/7
N2 - To define clinically an unusual acute paralytic syndrome with features distinctive from those of the Guillain-Barré syndrome and similar to those described in Chinese children and young adults. —Case series. —University medical centers. —Three North American men (mean age, 29 years) who presented with acute symmetric weakness and muscle cramps after a preceding gastrointestinal tract illness. These patients had no sensory symptoms, developed no respiratory insuffiency or facial weakness, and had normal to brisk muscle stretch reflexes. —Results of serial nerve conduction studies were normal except for low-amplitude motor potentials. Needle electromyography revealed diffuse denervation potentials. Cerebrospinal fluid showed an elevated protein level and, in one case, a mild pleocytosis. A sural nerve biopsy specimen in one patient was normal; muscle biopsy specimens showed denervation atrophy. —These cases resemble those described in Chinese children and young adults and may represent a postviral monophasic process affecting the anterior horn cell or distal motor nerve terminal. Further pathologic correlation will be required to identify the exact site of the lesion. Differentiation is important when considering modes of treatment.
AB - To define clinically an unusual acute paralytic syndrome with features distinctive from those of the Guillain-Barré syndrome and similar to those described in Chinese children and young adults. —Case series. —University medical centers. —Three North American men (mean age, 29 years) who presented with acute symmetric weakness and muscle cramps after a preceding gastrointestinal tract illness. These patients had no sensory symptoms, developed no respiratory insuffiency or facial weakness, and had normal to brisk muscle stretch reflexes. —Results of serial nerve conduction studies were normal except for low-amplitude motor potentials. Needle electromyography revealed diffuse denervation potentials. Cerebrospinal fluid showed an elevated protein level and, in one case, a mild pleocytosis. A sural nerve biopsy specimen in one patient was normal; muscle biopsy specimens showed denervation atrophy. —These cases resemble those described in Chinese children and young adults and may represent a postviral monophasic process affecting the anterior horn cell or distal motor nerve terminal. Further pathologic correlation will be required to identify the exact site of the lesion. Differentiation is important when considering modes of treatment.
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U2 - 10.1001/archneur.1993.00540070050014
DO - 10.1001/archneur.1993.00540070050014
M3 - Article
C2 - 8323477
AN - SCOPUS:0027247643
SN - 0003-9942
VL - 50
SP - 732
EP - 735
JO - Archives of Neurology
JF - Archives of Neurology
IS - 7
ER -