1. Progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity. Brain investigations were normal. There were no cells in the cerebrospinal fluid; the protein concentration was 0-54g/l and the glucose 4 mM/I (73 mg/dl). Nerve conduction studies and computed tomography of his posterior by a short episode of diarrhoea but there were no symptoms of enteritis at presentation. One patient received antibiotic therapy but both made full recoveries with no other specific treatment;Whiteley, A.M.; Swash, M.; Urich, H.;Retrospective,1976
2. Sandorsensitive to erythromycin, was grown from been demonstrated in over a third of a recent Eggerth H. Stiff-man syndrome with abnorhis stool. There was no other evidence of series of patients with Guillain-Barre synmalities in CSF and computerized tomography findings;Maida, E.; Reisner, T.; Summer, K.;Arch Neurol,1980
3. Progressive fluctuating muscular rigidity and spasm ("stiff-man" syndrome): report of a case and some observations in 13 other cases. Mavo infection. A 5 day course of erythromycin cleared his stool of the organism. He required nasogastric feeding but did not suffer any respiratory embarassment. His neurological disability remained static for 10 drome.4 A history of diarrhoeal illness should be sought and asymptomatic campylobacter infection considered in patients presenting with these conditions. No comment can be made, however, on;Moersch, F.P.; Woltman, H.W.
4. Marsden No definitive treatment other than the antistool. There remains debate about the exact CD. A patient with reflex myoclonus and biotic was employed. Three months later he site of the lesions in Miller Fisher synmuscle rigidity: "jerking stiff-man syndrome";Leigh, P.N.; Rothwell, J.C.; Traub, M.;J Neurol Neurosurg Ps, tychiatry,1980
5. Pathophysiology of campylobacter enteritis;Walker, R.I.; Caldwell, M.B.; Lee, E.C.; Guerry, P.; Trust, T.J.; Ruiz-Palacios, G.M.;Microbiol Rev,1986