• Hepatol Res · Oct 2002

    Campylobacter-associated Guillain-Barré syndrome after orthotopic liver transplantation for hepatitis C cirrhosis: a case report.

    • Isabelle Colle, Hans Van Vlierberghe, Roberto Troisi, Katrien De Ridder, Dominique Benoit, Bernard de Hemptinne, and Martine De Vos.
    • Department of Hepato-Gastroenterology, Ghent University Hospital, De Pintelaan 185, 9000, Gent, Belgium
    • Hepatol Res. 2002 Oct 1; 24 (2): 205.

    AbstractGuillain-Barré syndrome is characterized by acute paralysis and ascending neuropathy due to an inflammatory attack on the myelin of peripheral nerves. About 2/3 of patients with Guillain-Barré syndrome have an infection 1-3 weeks before the onset of the symptoms. Guillain-Barré syndrome has rarely been reported after solid organ transplantation (18 cases with three cases after liver transplantation), and these cases are mostly related to a CMV infection. We describe a 64-year-old male patient who developed Guillain-Barré syndrome related to a Campylobacter fetus enteritis, 70 days post liver transplantation. Although the patient received tacrolimus as immunosuppressant agent and is hepatitis C positive, we can conclude that the Campylobacter infection was probably the primary trigger for the development of Guillain-Barré syndrome. As T-cell response is depressed in our patient and cross-reactive antibodies (anti-ganglioside GM-1) exists after Campylobacter infection, we suppose that a humorally mediated attack is responsible for Guillain-Barré syndrome after solid organ transplantation. A review of the literature is performed.

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