| Literature DB >> 30032119 |
James A Varley1, Alastair J S Webb1, Bettina Balint1,2, Victor S C Fung3, Kapil D Sethi4, Marina A J Tijssen5, Timothy Lynch6, Shakeeb S Mohammad7, Fiona Britton1, Matthew Evans1, Yael Hacohen8, Jean-Pierre Lin8, Nardo Nardocci9, Tiziana Granata9, Russell C Dale7, Ming J Lim8, Kailash P Bhatia10, Anthony E Lang11, Sarosh R Irani12.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: NMDA receptor; autoantibody; autoimmune; encephalitis; movement disorders
Year: 2018 PMID: 30032119 PMCID: PMC6581096 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp-2018-318584
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ISSN: 0022-3050 Impact factor: 10.154
Figure 1The clinical features and movement disorder evaluations in 34 patients with N-methyl-D-aspartate-antibody encephalitis (NMDAR-AbE). (A) Clinical and investigation findings across the 34 patients whose videos were rated. By definition, all patients had a movement disorder (MD) and other clinical and paraclinical features included psychiatric (n=33/34), cognitive (n=32/34), seizures (n=30/34), autonomic (n=17/34), abnormal electroencephalogram (n=28/30), abnormal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) (n=19/33) and abnormal MRI (n=9/34). Abnormal CSF findings included any of pleocytosis, oligoclonal bands or raised protein. Two ovarian teratomas were noted in postpubescent women (25 and 32 years). Overall, three cases were adults. (B) Symptom onset and offset in NMDAR-AbE: timings of onset (black) and offset (grey) of the main five symptom categories after first symptom (day 1; median, minimum and maximum values displayed on box and whisker plot), (C) with a particular focus on the timing of the MD in individual patients. Full datasets were available from coauthors and denominators <34 represent variably reported details from the literature-derived videos. Expert classification of phenomenology for 76 videos from patients with NMDAR-AbE (D–F). (D) Dystonia, chorea and stereotypies were the most commonly used terms. For the ‘other’ category, raters used terms including: mutism, stupor, myorhythmia, myokymia, tics, opisthotonus, cerebellar syndrome/ataxia, orofacial dyskinesia, waxy flexibility, oculogyric crises, athetosis, agitation, seizure, startle and vocal perseveration. (E) The interactions between phenomenologies in NMDAR-AbE with co-occurrence of stereotypies, chorea and dystonia shown in a Circos plot,e20 based on a co-occurrence matrix within single video ratings. (F) Stereotypies, chorea and dystonia were equally represented in the face, arm and leg, respectively.