Hughes R A, Hadden R D, Gregson N A, Smith K J
Department of Neuroimmunology, Guy's, King's and St. Thomas' School of Medicine, Guy's Hospital, London, UK.
J Neuroimmunol. 1999 Dec;100(1-2):74-97. doi: 10.1016/s0165-5728(99)00195-2.
Recent neurophysiological and pathological studies have led to a reclassification of the diseases that underlie Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) into acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (AIDP), acute motor and sensory axonal neuropathy (AMSAN) and acute motor axonal neuropathy (AMAN). The Fisher syndrome of ophthalmoplegia, ataxia and areflexia is the most striking of several related conditions. Significant antecedent events include Campylobacter jejuni (4-66%), cytomegalovirus (5-15%), Epstein-Barr virus (2-10%), and Mycoplasma pneumoniae (1-5%) infections. These infections are not uniquely associated with any clinical subtype but severe axonal degeneration is more common following C. jejuni and severe sensory impairment following cytomegalovirus. Strong evidence supports an important role for antibodies to gangliosides in pathogenesis. In particular antibodies to ganglioside GM1 are present in 14-50% of patients with GBS, and are more common in cases with severe axonal degeneration associated with any subtype. Antibodies to ganglioside GQ1b are very closely associated with Fisher syndrome, its formes frustes and related syndromes. Ganglioside-like epitopes exist in the bacterial wall of C. jejuni. Infection by this and other organisms triggers an antibody response in patients with GBS but not in those with uncomplicated enteritis. The development of GBS is likely to be a consequence of special properties of the infecting organism, since some strains such as Penner 0:19 and 0:41 are particularly associated with GBS but not with enteritis. It is also likely to be a consequence of the immunogenetic background of the patient since few patients develop GBS after infection even with one of these strains. Attempts to match the subtypes of GBS to the fine specificity of anti-ganglioside antibodies and to functional effects in experimental models continue but have not yet fully explained the pathogenesis. T cells are also involved in the pathogenesis of most or perhaps all forms of GBS. T cell responses to any of three myelin proteins, P2, PO and PMP22, are sufficient to induce experimental autoimmune neuritis. Activated T cells are present in the circulation in the acute stage, up-regulate matrix metalloproteinases, cross the blood-nerve barrier and encounter their cognate antigens. Identification of the specificity of these T cell responses is still at a preliminary stage. The invasion of intact myelin sheaths by activated macrophages is difficult to explain according to a purely T cell mediated mechanism. The different patterns of GBS are probably due to the diverse interplay between antibodies and T cells of differing specificities.
最近的神经生理学和病理学研究已导致将吉兰-巴雷综合征(GBS)的相关疾病重新分类为急性炎症性脱髓鞘性多发性神经根神经病(AIDP)、急性运动和感觉轴索性神经病(AMSAN)以及急性运动轴索性神经病(AMAN)。眼肌麻痹、共济失调和无反射的费舍尔综合征是几种相关病症中最显著的一种。重要的前驱事件包括空肠弯曲菌感染(4%-66%)、巨细胞病毒感染(5%-15%)、EB病毒感染(2%-10%)和肺炎支原体感染(1%-5%)。这些感染并非与任何临床亚型有独特关联,但空肠弯曲菌感染后严重轴索变性更常见,巨细胞病毒感染后严重感觉障碍更常见。有力证据支持神经节苷脂抗体在发病机制中起重要作用。特别是,14%-50%的GBS患者存在抗神经节苷脂GM1抗体,在与任何亚型相关的严重轴索变性病例中更常见。抗神经节苷脂GQ1b抗体与费舍尔综合征、其顿挫型及相关综合征密切相关。空肠弯曲菌细胞壁中存在神经节苷脂样表位。这种及其他病原体感染会在GBS患者中引发抗体反应,但在单纯性肠炎患者中不会。GBS的发生可能是感染病原体特殊性质的结果,因为某些菌株如彭纳0:19和0:41特别与GBS相关而非肠炎。这也可能是患者免疫遗传背景的结果,因为即使感染这些菌株之一,也很少有患者会发生GBS。将GBS亚型与抗神经节苷脂抗体的精细特异性及实验模型中的功能效应相匹配的尝试仍在继续,但尚未完全解释发病机制。T细胞也参与了大多数或可能所有形式GBS的发病机制。T细胞对三种髓磷脂蛋白P2、PO和PMP22中任何一种的反应足以诱导实验性自身免疫性神经炎。活化的T细胞在急性期存在于循环中,上调基质金属蛋白酶,穿过血-神经屏障并遇到其同源抗原。这些T细胞反应特异性的鉴定仍处于初步阶段。根据纯粹的T细胞介导机制,难以解释活化巨噬细胞对完整髓鞘的侵袭。GBS的不同模式可能归因于不同特异性抗体和T细胞之间的多种相互作用。