In 1859, Landry(1) described the clinical features of acute ascending weakness without amyotrophy. Other 19th-century clinical descriptions followed, but the full extent of the motor polyradiculoneuritis and the characteristic albuminocytologic dissociation in the cerebrospinal fluid was only described in 1916 by Guillain, Barre, and Strohl.(2) Guillain (1876-1961), who eventually held Charcot's Professorial Chair at the Salpietriere in Paris, France, encountered the syndrome in soldiers while he was chief staff physician for the Sixth Army Neurological Center at the North front in France. Over the subsequent 20 years, more than 30 such cases were documented in the international medical literature to which Guillain(3) himself added 10 cases in his follow-up article of 1936. The condition became known internationally under the rubric Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS). Although the condition was originally suspected to be infectious in nature, the distinctive pathological features led to hypotheses of immunological origin. This article cites seminal views on the syndrome and traces historical developments up to the time of Guillain's death in 1961.
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Univ Malaya, Fac Med, Dept Med, Neurol Unit, Kuala Lumpur 50603, MalaysiaUniv Malaya, Fac Med, Dept Med, Neurol Unit, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia
Shahrizaila, Nortina
Lehmann, Helmar C.
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Univ Cologne, Fac Med, Dept Neurol, Cologne, Germany
Univ Cologne, Univ Hosp Cologne, Cologne, GermanyUniv Malaya, Fac Med, Dept Med, Neurol Unit, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia
Lehmann, Helmar C.
Kuwabara, Satoshi
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Chiba Univ, Grad Sch Med, Dept Neurol, Chiba, JapanUniv Malaya, Fac Med, Dept Med, Neurol Unit, Kuala Lumpur 50603, Malaysia