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Apex Nursing

Chart — Neurology

Myasthenia Gravis vs Guillain-Barré Chart

Two neuromuscular diseases that move in opposite directions — MG descends and fatigues, GBS ascends with lost reflexes — and meet at the same emergency when the weakness reaches the diaphragm.

Educational use only. Crisis and immunotherapy management are specialist-directed; escalate respiratory decline early in both diseases. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Side by Side

FeatureMyasthenia gravisGuillain-Barré
What's wrongAntibodies block acetylcholine receptors at the neuromuscular junctionAutoimmune demyelination of peripheral nerves
Direction of weaknessDESCENDING — eyes/face first, then downASCENDING — feet/legs up toward the trunk
Hallmark featureFatigability — worse with use, better with restSymmetric weakness + AREFLEXIA (lost deep tendon reflexes)
Onset / triggerChronic; flares with infection, stress, surgery, certain drugsAcute, 1–3 weeks AFTER a respiratory or GI infection
First signsPtosis, diplopia, then bulbar weaknessLeg weakness/paresthesias ascending, with pain
CourseChronic with exacerbations; crises possibleAscends over days, plateaus, then recovers (usually well)
TreatmentPyridostigmine, immunosuppression, thymectomy; IVIG/PLEX in crisisIVIG or plasmapheresis (NOT anticholinesterases or steroids)
Shared dangerRespiratory muscle weakness → failureRespiratory failure + autonomic instability

Exam Traps

  • MG = DESCENDING + fatigable (ptosis/diplopia first); GBS = ASCENDING + areflexia after an infection.
  • Both threaten the airway — monitor FVC/NIF; a falling vital capacity warns before SpO₂ falls.
  • MG treatment is pyridostigmine (give on time, before meals); GBS treatment is IVIG or plasmapheresis.
  • Anticholinesterases and steroids do NOT treat GBS.
  • GBS adds autonomic instability (BP swings, arrhythmias) — continuous cardiac monitoring.

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American Heart Association / American Stroke Association (AHA/ASA) · American Association of Neuroscience Nurses (AANN). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →