| Literature DB >> 32013931 |
Julia Shekunov1, Caren J Blacker2, Jennifer L Vande Voort1, Jan-Mendelt Tillema3, Paul E Croarkin1, Magdalena Romanowicz4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autoimmune encephalitis is characterized by neuropsychiatric symptoms associated with brain inflammation. The differential is usually broad and Psychiatry often collaborates with Neurology in diagnostic clarification and symptom management. At least 40% of neuroencephalitis cases are of unknown etiology which adds to difficulties in making the right diagnosis and deciding on the appropriate treatment (Granerod et al., Lancet Infect Dis 10:835-44, 2010). The aim of this case series was to present four cases with complicated psychiatric symptomatology and isolated neurologic signs and symptoms, evaluated at a large tertiary medical center and treated for suspected autoimmune encephalitis, demonstrating the complexity of diagnosis and treatment. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Autoimmune; Encephalitis; Neuropsychiatric; Psychiatric; Seronegative
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32013931 PMCID: PMC6996166 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-020-1605-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Summary of physical, laboratory, imaging findings, treatment and outcomes for 4 cases of suspected autoimmune encephalitis. Clinical features suggestive of autoimmune encephalitis are bolded
| Case | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age in years/sex | 13/M | 17/F | 9/F | 17/M |
| Symptom duration | 8 months | 3 months | 1 year | 6 months |
| Physical symptoms | Abdominal pain Emesis Urinary retention Vibratory tactile sensation in head Dysphagia Constipation | |||
| Psychiatric symptoms | ||||
| Family History of autoimmune disease | None | None | Father with multiple sclerosis Paternal aunt with Myasthenia Gravis | None |
| Serum and urine | Mildly elevated GAD65 antibody (0.15 nmol/L), otherwise unremarkable including rest of encephalopathy panel, electrolytes including calcium (with exception of low phosphorus), folate, B12, Lyme serology, herpes simplex, enterovirus, cryptococcus, VDRL, whole exome sequencing | Mildly elevated GAD65 antibody (0.15 nmol/L), otherwise unremarkable including CBC, electrolytes, thyroid function, liver function, C-reactive protein, B12, ceruloplasmin, toxicology, heavy metals, blood smear, urinalysis | Unremarkable including outside hospital testing CBC, CMP, inflammatory markers, thyroid studies, ammonia, folate, copper, ceruloplasmin, heavy metals, plasma amino acids, urine organic acids, very long chain fatty acids, lysosomal disorders screen, chromosomal microarray, Noonan panel. Repeat inpatient testing unremarkable | Unremarkable except for low ferritin (12 mcg/L), including toxicology screen, CBC, electrolytes, inflammatory markers, thyroid function |
| MRI | Unremarkable other than evidence of malnutrition | Slit third ventricle with narrowed lateral ventricles, no cerebral hypotension and diffuse changes consistent with perinatal insult | Unremarkable | Unremarkable |
| CSF | Mildly elevated protein (45 mg/dL), otherwise unremarkable; no presence of bands | Total protein elevated (144 mg/dL; 110 mg/dL 6 months later); no presence of bands | Unremarkable; no presence of bands | Positive GFAP antibodies from outside hospital, repeat negative; no presence of bands |
| EEG | Unremarkable | Unremarkable | Intermittent diffuse nonspecific bifrontal slowing, bifrontal spikes and sharp waves without clinical correlate, intermittent independent left/right temporal slowing | Mild nonspecific background slowing |
| Treatment with IVIG or corticosteroids | 5 days IV methylprednisolone; 5 days IVIG then monthly infusions for 3 months | 5 days IVIG then intermittent doses; 5 days methylprednisolone upon readmission | 3 days high dose IV methylprednisolone then oral prednisone; single dose IVIG then twice-weekly IVIG, then monthly IVIG; rituximab | 5 days IV methylprednisolone |
| Response | Improved over time | Initial significant improvement, not sustained with both treatment course. Return to baseline after neurosurgical intervention | Some initial improvement in mood, speech, social interactions; not sustained | Initial improvement, not sustained |
Fig. 1Summary of autoantibody testing in serum and spinal fluid in Mayo Clinic’s autoimmune encephalopathy panels with reference values in brackets. Test details and references obtained from Mayo Clinic Laboratory Test Catalog, https://www.mayocliniclabs.com/testcatalog/Overview/92116. (*Denotes testing completed in serum but not in spinal fluid)