@article{10.37349/en.2025.1006114,
abstract = {Guillain-Barré Syndrome is a rare cause of acute, flaccid paralysis and affects populations around the world, usually in the setting of recent gastrointestinal infection. The myelin sheaths of affected patients are destroyed, and consequently, the disease can manifest variably with the most common complaints including weakness, disturbances in sensation, and pain. Multiple available pharmacotherapies are employed to address disease progression and promote the reversal of symptoms. However, there is no widely accepted guideline detailing tiers of pain management options, despite pain being a significant primary complaint during the acute phase of the disease. To address this, we searched the Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) literature for publications that specifically discussed patient pain, how the pain was managed by the clinician, and how patients responded to various modalities. We discuss the findings of the literature review we conducted, evaluate the expansive list of existing options for treating pain and how they fared in symptom resolution, and draw conclusions based on our observations of which interventions addressed patient pain effectively and which were less successful. While general management of GBS, including treatment and efforts towards symptom reversal, has been robustly discussed in the literature, our work stresses the lack of research towards pain management in GBS and emphasizes the need to fill the gap in patient care for patients with this disease.},
author = {Groves, Kyla D. and Preisig, Alexander M. and Aldanese, Alexander and Aggarwal, Kunal},
doi = {10.37349/en.2025.1006114},
journal = {Exploration of Neuroscience},
elocation-id = {1006114},
title = {Pain management in Guillain-Barré Syndrome: a literature review},
url = {https://www.explorationpub.com/Journals/en/Article/1006114},
volume = {4},
year = {2025}
}