Blood pressure fluctuations in the dysautonomia of Guillain-Barré syndrome

Arch Neurol. 1990 Jun;47(6):706-8. doi: 10.1001/archneur.1990.00530060120029.

Abstract

A 76-year-old man with severe Guillain-Barré syndrome had extremes of hypotension alternating with hypertension. His blood pressure paralleled both systemic vascular resistance and cardiac output. Heart rate, rather than stroke volume, was the major determinant of cardiac output over a wide range of blood pressures. It was at times invariant for several hours and was unresponsive to carotid massage or respiratory cycles, but slowed slightly with each episode of hypotension. Trend monitoring indicated that hypotension preceded reductions in pulmonary artery diastolic pressure. These findings suggest that hypotension resulted from a vasodepressor response with a vagotomized heart and that hypertension was the result of increased sympathetic activity. Both extremes were caused by parallel changes in vascular resistance and heart rate. Dysfunction of baroreflex buffering may have accounted for the rapid swings in pressure.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Autonomic Nervous System Diseases / complications
  • Autonomic Nervous System Diseases / physiopathology*
  • Blood Pressure*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Polyradiculoneuropathy / complications
  • Polyradiculoneuropathy / physiopathology*