Guillain‐Barré syndrome
- 1 November 1985
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Neurology
- Vol. 35 (11) , 1662
- https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.35.11.1662
Abstract
Nineteen of 38 consecutive patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome were treated with mechanical ventilation in a neurological ICU. A ventilator was used for expiratory vital capacity (VC) below 12 to 15 ml/kg or arterial Po2 below 70 mm Hg, or clinical signs of fatigue. Artificial ventilation was discontinued when VC reached 8 to 10 ml/kg. Twelve patients required tracheostomy at 11 days (mean) after intubation. Mechanical ventilation was required for 49 days (mean). Complications included pneumonia in 15 patients, mostly aspiration, only 1 severe; pulmonary embolus in 1 ventilated and 1 nonventilated patient; and tracheal stenosis in 1. There was one death in a previously unintubated patient who developed sepsis while improving from GBS, and no deaths in the 18 other intubated patients.Keywords
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