Flachenecker P, Müllges W, Wermuth P, Hartung H P, Reiners K
Department of Neurology, Julius-Maximilians-Universität Würzburg, Germany.
Neurology. 1996 Jul;47(1):102-8. doi: 10.1212/wnl.47.1.102.
To investigate the usefulness of eyeball pressure testing (EP) as an indicator for impending serious bradyarrhythmias in patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) and its relationship to motor disability.
Autonomic dysfunction is a common complication in GBS and accounts for a significant number of deaths. Serious bradyarrhythmias are thought to occur only in severe cases but are difficult to predict.
METHODS/DESIGN: In 13 consecutive patients with GBS aged 29 to 70 years, 156 EP (6 to 19 per patient) were done serially for up to 1 year. Bilateral moderate pressure was manually applied and sustained for 25 seconds or until abnormal bradycardia developed, defined as heart rate below 40 beats per minute. Disability was graded by a score from 0 to 5 (DS).
Four of 13 patients (DS 2/2/3-4/5) showed abnormal sensitivity to EP at least once. In two of them, vagal overreactivity could be demonstrated repeatedly, which gradually resolved within 4 and 10 days. In one patient with a rapid progressive course requiring early cardiopulmonary resuscitation, a highly abnormal EP could be recorded until 1 day after heart arrest. Another patient (DS 3-4) with abnormal EP required cardiac pacing twice because of significant bradycardia. The only other event necessitating pacing occurred in a severely disabled patient (DS 5-4) who never showed abnormal EP.
Vagal overreactivity could be demonstrated in approximately 30% of our patients. It was not restricted to severe motor impairment and was also present in mild-to-moderately disabled patients. In this regard, EP may be a simple and useful bedside test to indicate an increased risk of developing serious bradyarrhythmias in patients with GBS.