| Literature DB >> 23379293 |
Sabine U Jantzen1, Stefano Ferrea, Claudia Wach, Kim Quasthoff, Sebastian Illes, Dag Scherfeld, Hans-Peter Hartung, Rüdiger J Seitz, Marcel Dihné.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anti-NMDA-encephalitis is caused by antibodies against the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) and characterized by a severe encephalopathy with psychosis, epileptic seizures and autonomic disturbances. It predominantly occurs in young women and is associated in 59% with an ovarian teratoma.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23379293 PMCID: PMC3573950 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-14-17
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurosci ISSN: 1471-2202 Impact factor: 3.288
Figure 1Time course of disease. Therapeutic procedures, CSF antibody titers and representative spike raster plots (x-axis: recording time in seconds; y-axis: channel number) of MEA experiments are given in relation to the time after initial hospitalization of the patient. Time points (T1-T3) of psychological tests are given.
Figure 2The neuropsychological course. At time point 1 (T1) the patient suffered from acoustic illusions, incoherence of thought, psychomotor agitation, mood instability and speech dysfunction (perseveration and neologisms). Mini-Mental-Status-Examination (MMSE: 22/30) showed clinically relevant cognitive impairment. Psychomotor speed assessed by the Trail-Making-Test-A (TMT-A) was average, cognitive flexibility/task switching (TMT-B), verbal memory span, working memory and semantic category verbal fluency were below average (percentile rank < 16). At T2, formal neuropsychological testing was not feasible due to clouding of consciousness, mutism and pronounced psychomotor slowing. Moreover, the patient displayed undirected utilization behaviour suggestive of severe frontal lobe dysfunction. At T3, neuropsychological functioning was considerably improved. MMSE was inconspicuous (30/30). With the exception of discrete impairment regarding verbal memory span, formal neuropsychological testing revealed above average psychomotor speed (TMT-A) and cognitive flexibility (TMT-B), average working memory and executive functioning as measured by semantic category verbal fluency. Interestingly, phonemic verbal fluency, which is considered to involve frontal cognitive control even more than semantic category tasks, was below average, possibly hinting at a subtle residual executive impairment.
Figure 3The microelectrode arrays. In a), diagrams illustrate effects of cCSF and pCSF collected at different time points during the course of the disease. Stars illustrate significances against CSF taken 4 days after admission (May 1st) or five weeks after admission (June 1st). In b), diagrams illustrate quick effects of cCSF (left) or pCSF (middle and right) in comparison to aCSF over a time course of 45 minutes (15 minutes in aCSF, 15 minutes in pCSF and 15 minutes again in aCSF). Bars represent standard error of the mean.