a week when she suddenly couldn't get up in the morning and her feet had gone numb . and when her son took her to hospital the neurologists had an immediate suspicion gaon bare a syndrome a complication of camp backtrack infection. syndrome causes rapid paralysis it typically starts and it's beat and then spread slowly affecting the legs and later the hands by which better called. an examination of her cerebral spinal fluid confirmed the suspicion that doctors discovered antibodies that can trigger paralysis. at the beginning of every infection the body produces antibodies that set about destroying the pathogen. unfortunately the surface of campell are back to closely resembles that of our