Neuritis cordis due to the acute polyneuritis of the Guillain-Barré syndrome

1988 
Three patients with the Guillain-Barre syndrome which followed the course of Landry's acute ascending paralysis died a sudden cardiac death. Autonomic dysfunction had appeared clinically, consisting of sphincter disturbances in one patient and fluctuating blood pressure and bradycardia in the other. In a twenty-three year old female patient cardiac function had been inconspicuous, apart from tachycardia, but the ECG showed S-T segment depression and flat T waves. Postmortem examination revealed acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuritis involving the peripheral autonomic nervous system and especially the nerves of the heart. Immunohistochemically, the inflammatory cell infiltrations of this neuritis cordis consisted of macrophages (MAC 387 positive) and T lymphocytes (UCHL1 positive). No indication of a direct viral infection of the inflamed cardiac nerves was detectable by immunohistochemistry (HSV, CMV, influenza virus) nor by electron microscopy. The neuritis cordis was classified as an inflammatory cardioneuropathy secondary to a patchy acute polyneuritis of the Guillain-Barre syndrome, involving the autonomic nervous system. Myocarditis could be discounted, and the neuritis cordis was thought to be responsible for the sudden cardiac death.
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