| Literature DB >> 32577332 |
Namita Neerukonda1, Michael Bliss1, Abtin Jafroodifar2, Luba Leontieva1.
Abstract
Anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor encephalitis has become one of the more well-known autoimmune diseases affecting the brain and it is characterized by a multitude of progressive neuropsychiatric symptoms. The following case describes the clinical course of an 18-year-old female with excited type catatonia secondary to anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis. The patient had been brought to the ED by her parents in an acutely psychotic state characterized by profound disorganization and vivid visual hallucinations. She was admitted to psychiatry and her hospital course was significant for both retarded and excited type catatonia, autonomic instability, and sensitivity to multiple neuroleptics. Given the atypicality of her symptoms and a family history of autoimmune disease, workup for autoimmune encephalitis was performed. MRI of the pelvis showed an indeterminate ovarian mass and laboratory studies were generally unremarkable. The catatonic symptoms resolved over the course of three weeks, eventually responding to a combination of lorazepam and olanzapine. Following discharge, a cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) panel resulted with positive titers for anti-NMDA receptor antibodies. This case illustrates the need to consider autoimmune encephalitis in cases of catatonia. It also presents a case in which symptoms of anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis potentially remitted without immunotherapy or mass resection.Entities:
Keywords: anti-nmda receptor encephalitis; catatonia; lorazepam; olanzapine
Year: 2020 PMID: 32577332 PMCID: PMC7305573 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.8689
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Imaging studies throughout hospital admission.
While MRI of the brain and EEG were largely unremarkable, a left-sided ovarian lesion was discovered and required further workup. Gynecology consultation was recommended to determine origin of the ovarian lesion as a possible hemorrhagic cyst versus an ovarian neoplasm.
MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; CT, computed tomography; EEG, electroencephalogram; US, ultrasound
| Date of imaging | Imaging study | Key findings |
| Day 4 | MRI brain | Within normal limits |
| Day 16 | CT thorax | Two ground glass nodular opacities in superior right lower lobe of lung, up to 4 mm |
| Day 16 | CT abdomen and pelvis | 3.5 cm left adnexal cystic lesion |
| Day 19 | EEG | Excess diffuse beta activity likely secondary to medication |
| Day 24 | US pelvis | 3.8 cm left adnexal cystic lesion with posterior mural nodule |
| Day 25 | MRI pelvis | Possible hemorrhagic cyst versus ovarian neoplasm |
Figure 1Axial CT images of the thorax.
Axial CT images of the thorax demonstrate two focal areas of ground glass opacities within the superior portion of the right lower lobe. (A) The larger ground glass nodule is located posterior to the right perihilum, and measures 4.1 mm in greatest dimension (blue arrow). (B) The smaller ground glass nodule is located slightly more posterosuperiorly, and measures 3.2 mm in greatest dimension (red arrow).
Figure 2CT of abdomen and pelvis and US of pelvis.
(A) Axial CT image of the abdomen and pelvis demonstrates a 3.5 cm left adnexal mass (curved red arrow) which measures fluid density centrally (approximately 4 houndsfield units). It is located anterior to the rectum and adjacent to loops of contrast-filled small bowel. (B) Sagittal ultrasound image of the pelvis without Doppler interrogation demonstrates a 3.5 cm anechoic cystic lesion within the left ovary (red arrow). The lesion demonstrates posterior acoustic enhancement. There is a smaller hyperechoic nodule along the posteroinferior margin of the lesion (blue arrow). (C) There is no definite blood flow within this nodular focus on the sagittal Doppler image (green arrow)
US, ultrasound
Figure 3MRI of pelvis.
(A) Coronal T2-weighted image through the pelvis demonstrates a round well-circumscribed lesion within the posterior left ovary, measuring 3.5 cm x 3.5 cm x 3.0 cm (red arrow). This lesion demonstrates fluid signal intensity on multiple sequences. (B) Sagittal T2-weighted image through the pelvis with fat saturation shows a small nodular hypointense focus along the caudal wall of the lesion, measuring 1.2 cm x 0.5 cm x 0.6 cm (curved red arrow).