| Literature DB >> 32089910 |
Sinali O Seneviratne1,2, Katherine A Buzzard2,3, Belinda Cruse2, Mastura Monif2,4,5,6.
Abstract
Anti-GAD antibody syndrome is a result of the production of antibodies against glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD), the main enzyme responsible for the production of gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Several neurological manifestations including cerebellar ataxia and stiff person syndrome have been reported in association with anti-GAD antibodies. In this paper, we present a case of a young woman with anti-GAD antibodies who initially presented with cerebellar ataxia followed by stiff person syndrome three and a half years later. Having both cerebellar ataxia and stiff person syndrome is a rare occurrence in anti-GAD antibody syndrome. We emphasise the importance of long-term follow-up of patients with anti-GAD antibody syndrome, as delayed neurological manifestations can occur.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32089910 PMCID: PMC7031724 DOI: 10.1155/2020/8454532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Reports Immunol ISSN: 2090-6617
The evidence of exteroceptive reflexes following the right median nerve stimulation typical of reflex myoclonus as characterised in stiff person syndrome. When the median nerve was stimulated, there was a reflex EMG activity initially seen at rectus abdominis at a latency of 50.52–63.54 ms. Following this, there was rostral to caudal recruitment of the paraspinals (PSP) and sternocleidomastoid (SCM) with latencies of 49.48–91.15 ms.
| Nerve/sites | Onsetms | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R median nerve-triggered exteroceptive test | |||||||
| R SCM | 70.83 | 82.29 | 57.29 | 86.98 | 74.48 | 72.40 | |
| R deltoid | 76.56 | 95.31 | 68.75 | 63.02 | 78.65 | 72.40 | 62.50 |
| R C7 PSP | 65.63 | 72.40 | 88.54 | 70.83 | 51.04 | ||
| R T4 PSP | 63.54 | 61.46 | 49.48 | 75.00 | 69.79 | 46.88 | |
| R T12 PSP | 50.52 | 58.85 | 54.17 | 59.38 | 54.69 | 58.33 | 56.77 |
| R rectus abdominus | 65.63 | 58.85 | 66.15 | 54.69 | 70.83 | 57.29 | |
Previous studies describing the combination of anti-GAD antibody-associated stiff person syndrome and cerebellar ataxia.
| Reference | Age, sex | Presentation | Associated immunological disorders | Immunotherapy | Response to immunotherapy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giometto et al. [ | 55, female | SPS ≥ CA | DM1, PA | Steroids | Partial response |
| Kono et al. [ | 46, female | CA ≥ SPS | DM1 | NS | — |
| Kim et al. [ | 40, female | SPS + CA | DM1, HT | Steroids | Good response |
| Rakocevic et al. [ | 30, male | SPS ≥ CA | IVIG | Partial response | |
| 51, female | CA ≥ SPS | DM1, PA | IVIG, steroids | No response | |
| 72, female | SPS ≥ CA | IVIG, steroids | No response | ||
| 50, male | SPS ≥ CA | DM1, HT | NS | — | |
| 63, male | SPS ≥ CA | PA | IVIG | No response | |
| Ances et al. [ | 55, female | SPS + CA | — | IVIG | Good response |
| Schaefer and Moeller [ | 42, male | SPS + CA ≥ LE | DM1, HT | IVIG and steroids | No response, good response |
SPS = stiff person syndrome; CA = cerebellar ataxia; LE = limbic encephalitis; DM1 = type-1 diabetes mellitus; PA = pernicious anaemia; HT = Hashimoto thyroiditis; IVIG = intravenous immunoglobulin; NS = not specified.