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Published in: Indian Journal of Pediatrics 4/2019

01-04-2019 | Guillain-Barré Syndrome | Editorial Commentary

How Important it is to Differentiate AMAN from AIDP in Childhood GBS? A Clinician’s Perspective

Authors: Juhi Gupta, Prashant Jauhari

Published in: Indian Journal of Pediatrics | Issue 4/2019

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Excerpt

Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) is a monophasic acute immune-mediated polyradiculoneuropathy. It is now considered a heterogenous disorder encompassing immuno-pathologically distinct entities such as acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (AIDP), acute motor axonal neuropathy (AMAN), Miller Fisher syndrome (MFS) and other rare variants. The response to treatment and final outcome is majorly determined by the disease subtype and clinical severity. Knowing the prevalence of the various subtypes in our geographical region will not only provide important epidemiological data but will also aid in monitoring, treatment and prognostication of individual cases. Gupta and colleagues have tried to answer this relevant question in their prospective study in 57 children with GBS [1]. In backdrop of discordant literature, no consensus exists regarding the most common subtype of GBS in north India. Gupta et al., observed AIDP and AMAN in equal proportions [1]. Kalita et al. reported AIDP as the most common subtype (three times more common than AMAN) while AMAN was the most common subtype identified by Sankhyan et al. [2, 3]. The pediatricians must understand that all these studies have been conducted in tertiary care referral hospitals which are bound to see severe cases. They are not the true representation of the community level prevalence of GBS subtypes. Moreover, the proportion of children with in-excitable nerves/unclassifiable disease varied in all these studies which could have contributed to the observed discrepancy. Another important observation by Gupta et al. and others has been identification of key clinical handles that can aid in clinical pattern-based diagnosis and differentiate AMAN from AIDP even if electrophysiology is unavailable or non-contributory [13]. …
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Metadata
Title
How Important it is to Differentiate AMAN from AIDP in Childhood GBS? A Clinician’s Perspective
Authors
Juhi Gupta
Prashant Jauhari
Publication date
01-04-2019
Publisher
Springer India
Published in
Indian Journal of Pediatrics / Issue 4/2019
Print ISSN: 0019-5456
Electronic ISSN: 0973-7693
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12098-019-02918-3

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