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Is there any treatment?
There is no known cure for Guillain-Barre syndrome, but therapies can lessen the severity of the illness and accelerate the
recovery in most patients. There are also a number of ways to treat the complications of the disease. Currently, plasmapheresis
and high-dose immunoglobulin therapy are used. Plasmapheresis seems to reduce the severity and duration of the Guillain-Barré
episode. In high-dose immunoglobulin therapy, doctors give intravenous injections of the proteins that in small quantities,
the immune system uses naturally to attack invading organism. Investigators have found that giving high doses of these immunoglobulins,
derived from a pool of thousands of normal donors, to Guillain-Barré patients can lessen the immune attack on the nervous
system. The most critical part of the treatment for this syndrome consists of keeping the patient's body functioning during
recovery of the nervous system. This can sometimes require placing the patient on a respirator, a heart monitor, or other
machines that assist body function.
What is the prognosis?
Guillain-Barré syndrome can be a devastating disorder because of its sudden and unexpected onset. Most people reach the stage
of greatest weakness within the first 2 weeks after symptoms appear, and by the third week of the illness 90 percent of all
patients are at their weakest. The recovery period may be as little as a few weeks or as long as a few years. About 30 percent
of those with Guillain-Barré still have a residual weakness after 3 years. About 3 percent may suffer a relapse of muscle
weakness and tingling sensations many years after the initial attack.
What research is being done?
Scientists are concentrating on finding new treatments and refining existing ones. Scientists are also looking at the workings
of the immune system to find which cells are responsible for beginning and carrying out the attack on the nervous system.
The fact that so many cases of Guillain-Barré begin after a viral or bacterial infection suggests that certain characteristics
of some viruses and bacteria may activate the immune system inappropriately. Investigators are searching for those characteristics.
Neurological scientists, immunologists, virologists, and pharmacologists are all working collaboratively to learn how to prevent
this disorder and to make better therapies available when it strikes.