Antineural antibodies in Guillain-Barre syndrome and lymphocytic meningoradiculitis (Bannwarth's syndrome)
B. Ryberg, B. Hindfelt, B. Nilsson and J. E. Olsson
Antineural antibodies occur in Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS), but have not
been studied in lymphocytic meningoradiculitis (Bannwarth's syndrome),
which has clinical features in common with GBS. Employing a sensitive
complement-fixation assay with homogenates of nerve root and brain as
antigens, we recorded positive serum reactions to either tissue in 14 of 18
samples from patients with GBS during the first three weeks of the disease.
Five of nine samples were positive during the fourth to eighth weeks,
whereas all seven patients sampled thereafter had negative reactions. Four
GBS serum samples reacted only with nerve root, seven reacted only with
brain, and eight reacted with both antigen preparations. One of 12 patients
with meningoradiculitis and one of 50 supposedly healthy blood donors had
serum antibodies to brain. Our results support the concept of an autoimmune
mechanism in GBS, while in Bannwarth's syndrome an infectious cause related
to that of Lyme disease may be suspected.