| Literature DB >> 27625730 |
Jessa Baker1, Chris Jeziorkowski2, Cory Siebe3, Megan Boysen Osborn4.
Abstract
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27625730 PMCID: PMC5017850 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2016.6.30510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Incidence of symptoms associated with anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis as described in previous case-studies.
| Study and year | Median age and range (years) | Number of patients (Percent female) | Viral prodrome | Psychiatric symptoms | Memory deficits | Changes in speech | Seizures | Movement disorders | Central hypoventilation and/or intubation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dalmau (2007) | 27 (14–44) | 12(100% F) | 10 (83%) | 10 (83%) | 6 (50%) | 6 (50%) | 11 (92%) | 7 (58%) | 10 (83%) |
| Iizuka (2008) | 26.5(17–33) | 4(100% F) | 4 (100%) | 4 (100%) | NR | 4 (100%) | 3 (75%) | 4 (100%) | 3 (75%) |
| Dalmau (2008) | 23(5–76) | 100(91% F) | 72 (of 84 pts,86%) | 77 (77%) | 23 (23%) | NR | 76(76%) | 86 (86%) | 66 (66%) |
| Florance (2009) | 14(2–48) | 81 | 15 (of 31,48%) | 19 (of 32,59%) | NR | 17 (of 32,53%) | 23 (of 30,77%) | 26 (of 31,84%) | 7 (of 31,23%) |
| Gable (2012) | 12.5 (2–28) | 32(75% F) | NR | ≥24 | NR | 23 (72%) | 22 (69%) | 20 (63%) | 13 (41%) |
| Lin (2014) | 18(7–28) | 12(83.3% F) | 7 (58.3%) | 11 (91.6%) | NR | 7 (58.3%) | 11 (91.6%) | 12 (100%) | 8 (66.7%) |
| Wang (2015) | 21.6(9–39) | 51(63% F) | 31(61%) | 46 (90%) | 16 (31%) | 23 (45%) | 43 (84%) | 29 (57%) | 14 (28%) |
F, female; GI, gastrointestinal; URI, upper respiratory tract infection; R, range; NR, not reported
Viral prodrome includes symptoms such as fever, cough, rhinorrhea, vomiting, diarrhea, headaches.
Psychiatric symptoms include hallucinations, insomnia, fear, catatonia, delusions, mania, paranoia, anxiety, and agitation.
Changes in speech include mutism, dysarthria, aphasia, and incomprehensible speech.
Movement disorders include orofacial dyskinesias, choreoathetoid movements, muscle rigidity, dystonic postures, and oculogyric crisis.
Dalmau and colleagues include previously reported cases in their case series.
Information was only available for 84 patients
Changes in speech described, but exact number was not reported.
There were 81 patients in the study, but the characteristics of the pediatric patients are those reported.
The exact number of prodromal symptoms and psychiatric symptoms is not reported. However, 56% of patients had a fever, 28% had GI symptoms, 19% had URI symptoms, and 38% had headache. Hallucinations (66%), psychosis (59%), and irritability (75%) were reported separately, but there was no description of the overall number of patients with psychiatric symptoms.