| Literature DB >> 32508739 |
Fei Zhu1,2, Wei Shan1,2,3, Ruijuan Lv1,2, Zhimei Li1,2, Qun Wang1,2,3.
Abstract
Objective: Anti-GABA-B (gamma aminobutyric acid-B) receptor encephalitis is an autoimmune disease mediated by GABA-B-related antibodies. To fully understand the disease, we collected clinical data from patients with GABA-B receptor encephalitis and conducted an analysis to draw conclusions.Entities:
Keywords: anti-GABA-B receptor encephalitis; autoimmune encephalitis; clinical characteristics; electroencephalogram; magnetic resonance imaging; positron emission tomography/computed tomography; seizure
Year: 2020 PMID: 32508739 PMCID: PMC7253677 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00403
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Demographics and clinical characteristics.
| 1 | Male | 52 | Fever before disease onset, a maximum temperature of 38.5°C, with chills, night sweats, headache, and dizziness; | Long-term smoking and drinking history |
| 2 | Male | 44 | CPS, decreased memory | Normal |
| 3 | Male | 62 | CPS, GTCS, decreased memory, mental behavioral abnormalities, poor sleep | Hypertension, diabetes, coronary heart disease, tuberculous pleurisy |
| 4 | Female | 50 | CPS, GTCS, decreased memory | Hypertension |
| 5 | Female | 23 | CPS | Normal |
| 6 | Female | 30 | Fever before disease onset, maximum temperature of 38°C with headache; CPS, GTCS, decreased memory; hearing comprehension and expression disorders | Normal |
| 7 | Male | 50 | GTCS, decreased memory, mental behavioral abnormalities | Normal |
| 8 | Female | 69 | GTCS, decreased memory, mental behavioral abnormalities | Rheumatoid arthritis |
| 9 | Male | 54 | CPS, GTCS, mental behavioral abnormalities | Hypertension, hepatitis B |
| 10 | Male | 69 | CPS, GTCS, decreased memory, mental behavioral abnormalities | 3-years history of brain injury, hypertension, pulmonary fibrosis, cerebral infarction, bilateral carotid plaque formation, atrial fibrillation |
| 11 | Male | 52 | Cold before onset, GTCS, decreased memory | Chronic nephritis, brucellosis |
| 12 | Male | 45 | Cold before onset, GTCS, CPS, SPS, decreased memory, mental behavioral abnormalities | Normal |
| 13 | Male | 69 | Fever before onset, maximum temperature of 38.1°C, GTCS, mental behavioral abnormalities | Lumbar disc protrusion, atrial fibrillation |
| 14 | Female | 67 | GTCS, non-convulsive status epilepticus, mental behavioral abnormalities, somnolence | Normal |
CSF profiles.
| 1 | N/A | 41/141, Monocyte 48.7%; | Normal | Positive | ↑ |
| 2 | 120 | 5/205, N/A | Normal | Positive | ↑ |
| 3 | 145 | 20/20, N/A | P:53.72 mg/dL | Positive | ↑ |
| 4 | 150 | 2/2, N/A | Normal | Negative | Normal |
| 5 | 170 | 7/7, Monocyte 14.3%; | Normal | Positive | ↑ |
| 6 | 280 | 368/468, Monocyte | Normal | Negative | ↑ |
| 7 | 140 | 2/2, N/A | Normal | Positive | ↑ |
| 8 | 145 | 3/103, Monocyte 33.4% | Normal | Positive | ↑ |
| 9 | 230 | 15/1415, Monocyte 40% | P:69.29 mg/dL | N/A | ↑ |
| 10 | 120 | 35/735, Monocyte 11.4% | Normal | Positive | ↑ |
| 11 | 90 | 16/416, N/A | Normal | Positive | ↑ |
| 12 | 230 | 8/8, N/A | P:77.46 mg/dL | Positive | ↑ |
| 13 | 105 | 6/6, N/A | P:46.03 mg/dL | N/A | N/A |
| 14 | 105 | 19/19, Monocyte 11% | P:63.27 mg/dL | Positive | ↑ |
↑, increased.
Serological profiles.
| 1 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | NSE↑, PROGrp↑ | Normal |
| 2 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | NSE↑ | Normal |
| 3 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | ROGrp↑, CYFRA21-1↑, NSE↑ | Normal |
| 4 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | CA72-4↑ | Normal |
| 5 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | Normal | Normal |
| 6 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | CA19-9↑, NSE↑ | TT3↓FT3↓ |
| 7 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | PROGrP↑, SCC↑, NSE↑ | Normal |
| 8 | GABAB antibody: Positive (Blood), positive (CSF) | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | CEA↑ | Normal |
| 9 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | CEA↑ | TSH↓ |
| 10 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus, EB virus, Herpes simplex virus (Blood) | Negative | CEA↑, CA242↑, t-PSA↑, CYFRA21-1↑ | Normal |
| 11 | GABAB antibody: | Herpes simplex virus, cytomegalovirus, EB virus(Blood) | Negative | Normal | Normal |
| 12 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | Normal | Normal |
| 13 | GABAB antibody: | N/A | Negative | Normal | Normal |
| 14 | GABAB antibody: | Cytomegalovirus antibody (CSF) | Negative | NSE↑, PROGrp↑, CYFRA21-1↑ | FT4↑, TG↑ |
↑, increased.
Figure 1EEG of typical patients. (A) EEG showed that the slow wave of the low middle amplitude was seen continuously in the right anterior middle temporal area. (B) EEG showed slow waves in the bilateral frontotemporal area and spinous waves in the left posterior parietooccipital temporal area.
Neuroimaging and neurophysiological features.
| 1 | Bilateral centrum semiovale and lateral paraventricular ischemic white matter lesions | Normal | Head PET-CT: |
| 2 | Bilateral MTL, abnormal signal | Right temporal lobe sharp wave | PET-CT of brain and trunk showed no obvious tumor such as hypermetabolism. |
| 3 | Normal | Interval EEG: left parietal, occipital and posterior temporal lobe slow wave and spike wave, left anterior temporal lobe sharp wave. Episodic EEG: probably originated from the left temporal lobe | The metabolism of left hippocampus, left temporal lobe, bilateral basal ganglia and left upper lobe of lung were increased, considered to be lung cancer. Left hilar and mediastinal lymph node metastasis. |
| 4 | Atrophy of right hippocampus | Right frontal lobe and anterior temporal lobe slow waves | Head PET-CT: The metabolism of the left posterior central gyrus was decreased, and suspected epileptogenic focus was considered. |
| 5 | Normal | Normal | |
| 6 | Multiple patchy and slightly long T1 and slightly long T2 signal shadows in the bilateral frontal lobe, temporal lobe and insula. FLAIR sequence showed strong signal, DWI showed strong signal, and enhanced scanning showed linear enhancement in bilateral frontal temporal pia mater | 1.5–2.5 Hz δ wave in bilateral frontal, anterior middle temporal lobe and frontal midline (Fz) areas | |
| 7 | A few lacunar and ischemic foci in bilateral corona radiata | Interval EEG: 4–6 Hz θ rhythm in bilateral frontal and midline (Fz) areas, spike wave in the left parietal, occipital and posterior temporal lobes, sharp wave in the left frontal and anterior temporal lobe; Episodic EEG: probably originated from the left anterior temporal lobe | Head PET-CT: The metabolism of the left angular gyrus, the left superior marginal gyrus and the left temporal lobe was decreased, the metabolism of the left hippocampus was increased. |
| 8 | Atrophy of bilateral hippocampus | Interval EEG: sharp and slow waves in the right anterior middle temporal lobe. Left parietal, occipital and posterior temporal sharp waves. Left anterior middle temporal lobe sharp wave. Episodic EEG: probably originated from the right anterior temporal lobe | Head PET-CT: Metabolism of the medial and basal ganglia of both temporal lobes was increased. |
| 9 | Encephalomalacia and chronic hemorrhagic foci in left temporal lobe | Normal | |
| 10 | Multiple ischemic white matter lesions | 4–6 Hz θ wave and 2.5–3.5 Hz δ wave in the left frontal and anterior middle temporal lobes | Head PET-CT: The metabolism of the medial temporal lobe, amygdala and hippocampus increased, which was consistent with the change in tumor associated encephalitis. |
| 11 | Left hippocampal volume slightly reduced | The spike wave and spike slow wave of bilateral frontal pole, forehead, center and anterior middle temporal lobe were not distributed synchronously, and the anterior middle temporal area was obvious, especially the right side | Head PET-CT: The metabolic distribution of bilateral temporal lobe was slightly uneven. |
| 12 | Gliosis of right hippocampus | Normal | |
| 13 | Bilateral MTL and hippocampus, abnormal signal | All leads fast wave | |
| 14 | Multiple ischemic white matter lesions | The state of non-convulsive epilepsy was persistent, and the interval EEG was slow and fast in bilateral frontal and anterior middle temporal areas. Attack period: the patient's responses were slow; her answers were not in line with what we asked; and the EEG showed slow wave, sharp wave and fast rhythm in bilateral frontal and anterior middle temporal areas. After an intravenous injection of diazepam, the patient's consciousness gradually cleared, and EEG slow wave signals gradually disappeared at the same time. | Head PET-CT: Bilateral lenticular nucleus and bilateral hippocampal metabolism increased. |
Figure 2EEG of a patient with status epilepticus. (A) During the attack, the patient's responses slowed, and the patient gave irrelevant answers. At the same time, the EEG results showed slow waves, sharp waves and fast rhythms in the bilateral frontal and anterior middle temporal areas. (B) After an intravenous injection of diazepam, the patient's consciousness gradually cleared, and the EEG slow wave gradually simultaneously disappeared.
Figure 3Abnormal signals in bilateral temporal, insular and hippocampal regions indicated by brain MRI. MRI showed a long T2 signal in bilateral temporal, insular and hippocampal slices, with a fuzzy border and uneven signals on the left side. A FLAIR scan showed a strong signal, and no obvious abnormal enhancement was found after injection. The temporal angle of the left lateral ventricle was enlarged, and the midline remained in the middle. MRI, magnetic resonance imaging. (A) T1 (T1-weighted imaging). (B) T2 (T2-weighted imaging). (C) FLAIR (fluid-attenuated inversion recovery). (D) T1C (MRI enhanced scan).
Figure 4Abnormal signals in the left temporal lobe, as indicated by brain MRI. MRI showed an oval mixed signal shadow in the left temporal cortex, a low signal in the FLAIR scan, a wide left fissure cistern, and no enhancement in the contrast-enhanced scan. MRI: magnetic resonance imaging. (A) T1 (T1-weighted imaging). (B) T2 (T2-weighted imaging). (C) FLAIR (fluid-attenuated inversion recovery). (D) T1C (MRI enhanced scan).
Figure 5PET-CT of a typical patient. PET-CT suggested that the metabolism of the bilateral medial temporal lobe and hippocampus was increased, especially on the right side.
Figure 6PET-CT of a typical patient. PET-CT suggested that the metabolism of the bilateral basal ganglia was increased, especially on the right side.