| Literature DB >> 29433523 |
Souhel Najjar1, Johann Steiner2, Amanda Najjar3, Karl Bechter4.
Abstract
Growing data point to the overlap between psychosis and pathological processes associated with immunological dysregulation as well as inflammation. Notably, the recent discovery of antibodies against synaptic and neuronal cell membrane proteins such as anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor provides more direct evidence of the etiological connection between autoimmunity and subsequent hazard of psychosis. Here, we advocate the use of term "autoimmune psychosis," as this term suggests that autoimmune disorders can masquerade as drug-resistant primary psychosis, and this subtype of psychosis has anatomical and immunological footprints in the brain, despite the frequent absence of structural abnormalities on conventional brain MRI. Furthermore, this term might serve as a reminder not to overlook appropriate neurological workup such as neuroimaging and EEG testing, as well as CSF analysis, for cases with acute or subacute atypical onset of neuropsychiatric presentations including those dominated by acute psychotic symptoms. We propose etiologically and serologically oriented subclassification as well as multi-modal diagnostic approach to address some of the challenges inherent to early diagnosis of patients presenting with atypical and refractory new-onset psychotic symptoms of autoimmune origin. This is particularly relevant to the diagnosis of seronegative but probable autoimmune psychosis (SPAP) that might masquerade as antipsychotic drug-resistant primary psychotic disorder. This distinction is therapeutically important as autoimmune-related psychotic symptomatology can frequently respond well to timely treatment with proper immune modulatory therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Antibodies; Autoimmune; Encephalitis; Microglia; NMDAR; Neuroimaging; Neuroinflammation; Neuronal; Psychosis; Synaptic
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29433523 PMCID: PMC5809809 DOI: 10.1186/s12974-018-1067-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neuroinflammation ISSN: 1742-2094 Impact factor: 8.322
Etiological subclassification of autoimmune psychosis
| Autoimmune Psychosis Subclass | Autoantibodies and proposed inflammatory mechanisms | Associated neurological and neuropsychiatric symptoms |
|---|---|---|
| Autoimmune encephalitis associated with synaptic and neuronal cell membrane proteins antibodies | NMDAR antibodies [IgG against NR1 (Glu1) subunit] | Cognitive decline, memory loss, speech fragmentation, seizures, dyskinesias, catatonia, autonomic instability, and central hypoventilation. Delta brush on EEG. |
| AMPAR antibodies (IgG against GluR1/2 subunits) | Cognitive decline, memory loss, affective changes, confusion, agitation, delirium, and seizures | |
| GABAßR antibodies (IgG against B1 subunit) | Seizures, memory loss, and confusion | |
| VGKC-protein complex antibodies: LGI1 antibodies | Amnesia, confusion, disorientation, autonomic dysfunction, apathy, irritability, faciobrachial dystonic seizures, and hyponatremia | |
| CASPR2 antibodies | Neuromyotonia, muscle spasm, fasciculation, neuropathic pain dysautonomia, confusion, amnesia, insomnia, and seizures | |
| Psychosis associated with autoimmune and inflammatory disorders | ||
| 1. Classical systemic autoimmune disorders: | ||
| Neuropsychiatric systemic lupus erythematosus | NMDAR antibodies [IgG against NR2 (Glu2) subunit] | Cognitive changes, affective disorders, anxiety, delirium, seizures, and neurovascular disease |
| 2. Neuroinflammatory disorders: | ||
| Inflammatory demyelinating disorders (MS, ADEM) | OCB antibodies | Focal symptoms and neurological deficits, optic neuritis; characteristic CSF analysis and brain imaging findings |
| 3. Hashimoto’s encephalopathy | Antithyroid antibodies: | Encephalopathy, memory loss, confusion, altered level of consciousness, seizures, stroke-like symptoms, and myoclonus |
| 4. Autoimmune encephalitis associated with antibodies targeting intracellular antigens | Onconeural antibodies (HU, MA2, CRMP5, Amphyphisin | Cognitive decline, short-term memory impairment, affective disorders, anxiety, seizures, neuropathy, cerebellar ataxia, and cranial neuropathy |
| GAD antibodies; often associated with GABAß antibodies | Cognitive decline, short-term memory impairment, affective disorders, anxiety, seizures, neuropathy, ataxia, weight loss, cerebellar ataxia, stiff person syndrome | |
| Seronegative but probable autoimmune encephalitis (SPAP) | Unknown autoantibodies | Encephalopathy, cognitive decline, memory impairment, affective disorders, and seizures |
Abbreviations: NMDAR N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor, AMPAR a-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor, GABAuR gamma-aminobutyric acid beta receptor, VGK.C voltage-gated potassium channel, LGI1 leucine-rich-glioma inactivated 1, CASPR2 contactin-associated protein-like 2, MS multiple sclerosis, ADEM acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, OCB oligoclonal band, MBP myelin basic protein, MOG myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein, TPO thyroid peroxidase, Tg thyroid globulin, GAD glutamic acid decarboxylase