Literature DB >> 6261677

Treatment of acute inflammatory polyneuropathy.

R A Hughes, M Kadlubowski, A Hufschmidt.   

Abstract

Most patients with acute inflammatory polyneuropathy (AIP) recover spontaneously, but the time course of the illness is unpredictable so that the results of treatment are difficult to assess. Three decades of retrospective reports of steroid treatment fail to demonstrate any striking beneficial effect. In a randomized trial of prednisolone, starting dose 60 mg daily, 21 treated patients improved more slowly than 19 untreated patients. By contrast, in rats immunized with bovine nerve root myelin, prednisolone at 10 mg/kg reduced the severity and duration of experimental allergic neuritis (EAN), the putative animal model for AIP. This discrepancy might reflect the greater difficulty of clinical as opposed to animal therapeutic trials or indicate that EAN is not the appropriate model for the human disease. Immunosuppressive drugs, plasmapheresis and other agents have also been employed, but their efficacy cannot be decided from the available case report. The role of similar agents in chronic progressive and relapsing inflammatory neuropathy cannot yet be resolved, but in some patients steroids do appear to be valuable.

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Year:  1981        PMID: 6261677     DOI: 10.1002/ana.410090718

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Neurol        ISSN: 0364-5134            Impact factor:   10.422


  9 in total

1.  IgG immunoadsorption in experimental allergic neuritis: effect on antibody levels and clinical course.

Authors:  G K Harvey; K Schindhelm; J D Pollard
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1989-07       Impact factor: 10.154

2.  The strategies used for treatment of experimental autoimmune neuritis (EAN): a beneficial effect of glatiramer acetate administered intraperitoneally.

Authors:  Ramona Aronovich; Aviva Katzav; Joab Chapman
Journal:  Clin Rev Allergy Immunol       Date:  2012-04       Impact factor: 8.667

Review 3.  Corticosteroids for Guillain-Barré syndrome.

Authors:  Richard Ac Hughes; Ruth Brassington; Angela A Gunn; Pieter A van Doorn
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2016-10-24

4.  Rare association of herpes simplex virus IgM-specific antibodies and Guillain-Barré syndrome successfully treated with plasma exchange and immunosuppression.

Authors:  G Gerken; F Trautmann; H Köhler; D Falke; J Bohl; W Nix; K H Meyer zum Büschenfelde
Journal:  Klin Wochenschr       Date:  1985-05-15

5.  Appearance of Guillain-Barré syndrome in patients during corticosteroid treatment.

Authors:  I Steiner; I Wirguin; O Abramsky
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  1986-08       Impact factor: 4.849

6.  Patterns and severity of conduction abnormalities in Guillain-Barré syndrome.

Authors:  W F Brown; R Snow
Journal:  J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry       Date:  1991-09       Impact factor: 10.154

7.  Cholinesterase activities in the autonomic nervous system of rabbits with experimental allergic neuritis: a biochemical study.

Authors:  M Saksa; G K Molnár; P J Riekkinen
Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  1983-05       Impact factor: 3.996

8.  Attempts to suppress experimental allergic neuritis in the rat by pretreatment with antigen.

Authors:  J V Brosnan; R I Craggs; R H King; P K Thomas
Journal:  Acta Neuropathol       Date:  1984       Impact factor: 17.088

Review 9.  Management of acute neurologic syndromes in infants and children.

Authors:  B A Shaywitz
Journal:  Yale J Biol Med       Date:  1984 Jan-Feb
  9 in total

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