| Literature DB >> 30233485 |
Julia C Nantes1,2, Adam G Thomas1,3, Natalie L Voets1, Jonathan G Best1,4, Clive R Rosenthal5, Adam Al-Diwani1,4,6, Sarosh R Irani4, Charlotte J Stagg1,7.
Abstract
This is the first study to investigate functional brain activity in patients affected by autoimmune encephalitis with faciobrancial dystonic seizures (FBDS). Multimodal 3T MRI scans, including structural neuroimaging (T1-weighted, diffusion weighted) and functional neuroimaging (scene-encoding task known to activate hippocampal regions), were performed. This case series analysis included eight patients treated for autoimmune encephalitis with FBDS, scanned during the convalescent phase of their condition (median 1.1 years post-onset), and eight healthy volunteers. Compared to controls, 50% of patients showed abnormal hippocampal activity during scene-encoding relative to familiar scene-viewing. Higher peak FBDS frequency was significantly related to lower hippocampal activity during scene-encoding (p = 0.02), though not to markers of hippocampal microstructure (mean diffusivity, p = 0.3) or atrophy (normalized volume, p = 0.4). During scene-encoding, stronger within-medial temporal lobe (MTL) functional connectivity correlated with poorer Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-Revised memory score (p = 0.03). These findings suggest that in autoimmune encephalitis, frequent seizures may have a long-term impact on hippocampal activity, beyond that of structural damage. These observations also suggest a potential approach to determine on-going MTL performance in this condition to guide long-term management and future clinical trials.Entities:
Keywords: LGI1; cognitive impairment; fMRI; hippocampus; seizures
Year: 2018 PMID: 30233485 PMCID: PMC6131496 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2018.00736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Individual demographic and clinical characteristics of participants treated for autoimmune encephalitis with FBDS.
| Age range (years) | 60–69 | 60–69 | 60–69 | 70–79 | 80–89 | >90 | 40–49 | 70–79 |
| Laterality | Bilateral | Bilateral | Bilateral | Bilateral (rapid alternating) | Bilateral (relapse) Right (originally) | Right | Right | Left |
| Affected body parts | Face Arm | Face Arm Leg | Face Arm Leg | Face Arm | Face Arm Leg | Face Arm | Face Arm | Face Arm |
| FBDS relapse | – | – | Yes | – | Yes | Yes | – | – |
| Antigenic target(s) | LGI1 | LGI1 | LGI1 and CASPR2 | LGI1 | LGI1 | LGI1 | Unidentified VGKC complex protein | LGI1 |
| Acute amnesia | Yes | – | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | – | – |
| Hippocampal volume (L/R) | 3,752/3,930 | 3,783/3,435 | 3,485/3,551 | 3,166/3,373 | 2,632/2,613 | 1,941/2,857 | 4,171/3,743 | 3,460/3,296 |
| Non-FBDS seizures | – | Yes | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Time since onset (years) | 0.6 | 5.3 | 1.8 | 1.1 | 1.0 | 1.1 | 0.3 | 0.8 |
Figure 1(A) Regions of Interest (ROIs) used for analysis. aHPC, anterior hippocampus; pHPC, posterior hippocampus; EC, entorhinal cortex; pPHG, posterior parahippocampal gyrus. (B) Mean percent BOLD signal difference during the encoding of new scenes verses viewing familiar scenes and (C) Mean hippocampal MD. For individuals who had unilateral FBDS, hemisphere specific measures are additionally plotted. Solid lines indicate between hemisphere differences in the predicted direction (based on clinically observed laterality of FBDS motor events), whereas dashed lines indicate between hemisphere differences were not in the predicted direction. (D) Correlation between peak FBDS severity and mean bilateral percent BOLD signal change in hippocampus during the encoding of new scenes compared to when viewing familiar scenes is plotted. Refer to Table 1 to match symbols of participating FBDS patients with individual demographic and clinical characteristics. (E) Peak ACE-R score at the time of peak impairment during the convalescent phase (day of neuroimaging assessment).