| Literature DB >> 32848899 |
Dominique Endres1,2, Sebastian Rauer3, Alexander Pschibul4, Patrick Süß5, Nils Venhoff6, Kimon Runge1,2, Bernd Feige1,2, Dominik Denzel1,2, Kathrin Nickel1,2, Tina Schweizer1,2, Simon Maier1,2, Karl Egger7, Katharina Domschke2,8, Philipp T Meyer9, Harald Prüss10,11, Ludger Tebartz van Elst1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autoimmune encephalitis, such as anti-NMDA-receptor encephalitis, typically presenting with subacute onset of neuropsychiatric symptoms, can be detected by antineuronal autoantibodies or inflammatory changes in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), as well as pathological alterations in electroencephalography (EEG), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), or [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET). For patients with predominant psychotic symptoms, the term autoimmune psychosis was proposed. Here, the authors present the case of a patient with probable autoimmune psychosis associated with unknown antineuronal antibodies. CASEEntities:
Keywords: antibodies; autoimmune encephalitis; autoimmune psychosis; catatonia; encephalopathy; schizophrenia
Year: 2020 PMID: 32848899 PMCID: PMC7424063 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1Imaging, electroencephalography (EEG) and neuropsychological findings. (A) The magnetic resonance imaging produced unsuspicious findings. (B) An [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET) examination at baseline revealed no relevant regional metabolic abnormality suggestive of inflammation. Upper row: Transaxial FDG PET images (voxel-wise FDG uptake normalized to whole brain uptake), lower row: 3D surface projections of regions with decreased FDG uptake (colour-coded Z-score, compared to age-matched healthy controls; minor, linear-shaped areas of hypometabolism were judged to be non-specific partial volume effects due to atrophy; 18). The cerebral FDG PET scan was performed as part of the whole-body PET/CT scan 50 min after injection of 340 MBq FDG (Vereos Digital PET/CT, Philips Healthcare, The Netherlands). (C) The routine EEG revealed marginal intermittent, rhythmic, and generalized slowing. (D) The independent component analyses showed sharp spikes in component 4, arc-shaped theta (sometimes delta waves) in component 5, and intermittent rhythmic, generalized delta activity (IRDAs) in component 6. (E) Rate of IRDAs during initial treatment: Under benzodiazepines (EEG 1, 3 and 4) the IRDA activity appeared to be low, after the steroid pulse (5) the IRDA rate increased significantly, during plasma exchange (6) they were reduced again, in the two follow-up EEGs directly after initial treatment (7) and half a year later under rituximab (8) the IRDA activity decreased overall, whereas without valproate the IRDAs were increased again after hyperventilation (7). EEG 1 was performed with a medication of lorazepam, amisulpride, and olanzapine; EEG 2 with valproate (lamotrigine in low dose) and amisulpride; EEG 3 with clobazam, valproate (lamotrigine in low dose), and amisulpride; EEG 4 with clobazam (low dose), valproate (lamotrigine in low dose), and amisulpride; EEG 5 with valproate (lamotrigine in low dose), amisulpride; after steroid pulse treatment, with still 40 mg methylprednisolone orally; EEG 6 with valproate (reduced), lamotrigine, amisulpride, still 10 mg methylprednisolone and after 4 cycles of plasma exchange; EEG 7 with valproate (low dose), lamotrigine, amisulpride, with still 10 mg methylprednisolone orally; EEG 8 follow up (a half year later) with lamotrigine and amisulpride. (F) Measures of attentional performance during the course of the disease (t2 was performed at six-months follow-up).
Figure 2The “tissue-based assay” using indirect immunofluorescence screening on unfixed brain sections of rodents identified antibody binding to granule cells in the granule cell layer of the cerebellum (above) and to neurites of hippocampal interneurons (below). Autoantibodies in the cerebrospinal fluid showed a “somatodendritic staining pattern” (arrows point to dendritic processes on hippocampal interneurons in stratum lacunosum moleculare), but also to cell nuclei, reflecting antinuclear antibodies (ANAs). In a control cerebrospinal fluid sample of the hippocampus (downright) there was no comparable signal. The cerebrospinal fluid material was used undiluted. ML, molecular layer; GCL, granule cell layer; WM, white matter.
Diagnostic findings (approximately 2.5 years after symptom onset).
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Abulia, loss of interests, dramatically reduced activity, akinetic mutism. Delusions/auditory hallucinations, no suicidal tendencies, no sleep disorders, normal appetite. Catalepsy and increased muscle tone, echo phenomena and intermittent excitation states. No focal neurological signs.
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Blood cell count, electrolytes, liver/kidney/pancreas values, and C-reactive protein were normal. Folic acid was normal. Vitamin B12 was high (887 pg/ml; reference: 771 pg/ml), and selenium was decreased (60; reference: 75-140 µg/l). Vitamin D was suboptimal (21 ng/ml; optimal: >30 ng/ml). Thyroid-stimulating hormone, triiodothyronine, and thyroxine levels were in normal ranges. Autoantibodies against thyroglobulin, TSH receptor and thyroid peroxidase were not detectable. Antibody testing for Lyme borreliosis, syphilis and HIV were negative. No IgG antibodies against the intracellular onconeural antigens Yo, Hu, CV2/CRMP5, Ri, Ma1/2, SOX1, Tr, Zic4 or the intracellular synaptic antigens GAD65/amphiphysin were found (using Ravo line assay®). Sox1 IgG autoantibodies were once weakly positive, in the course no more. IgG antibodies against different neuronal cell surface antigens (NMDA-R, AMPA-1/2-R, GABA-B-R, DPPX, LGI1, CASPR2) were negative (using Euroimmun biochip-assays®). Aquaporin 4 and MOG antibodies were negative. Positive “tissue-based assay” for unknown antineuronal antibodies with somatodendritic staining pattern binding to granule cells in the granule cell layer of the cerebellum and to neurites of hippocampal interneurons. Screening for serum antinuclear antibodies (ANA) using indirect immunofluorescence (IIF) on HEp-2000® cells (Immuno Concepts, Sacramento, CA, USA) showed increased titers (1:800; reference < 1:50) without specificity against extractable nuclear antigens (ENA, lineblot assay including nRNP/Sm, Sm, SS-A, Ro-52, SS-B, Scl-70, PM-Scl,Jo-1, CENP-B, PCNA, dsDNA, nucleosomes, histones, ribosomal-P-proteins, AMA-M2, and DFS70 (ANA-Profile 3 plus DFS70, Euroimmun, Luebeck, Germany) or double-stranded (ds)-DNA (IgG-ELISA, Euro-Diagnostica, Malmö, Sweden). Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA), antiphospholipid antibodies, and rheumatoid factor were negative. Anti-mitochondrial (AMA) and anti-smooth muscle antibodies (SMA) were borderline positive (+). Analyses of the complement system (C3, C4, CH50 and C3d) showed no relevant findings. Normal serum IgA, IgM und IgG immunoglobulin concentrations; immunofixation showed no monoclonal antibody production. Lymphocyte immunophenotyping by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis showed only a slightly decreased percentage of total lymphocytes (24.7%; reference 35-45%) but no relevant changes in lymphocyte subsets. |
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Normal white blood cell count (1/µL; reference <5/µL). Normal protein concentration (349 mg/L; reference <450 mg/L), and normal age-corrected albumin quotient: 3.4; age-dependent reference < 6.5 × 10–3). No CSF specific oligoclonal bands; IgG index not increased (0.6; reference ≤0.7). CSF lactate not increased (1.51 mmol/l; reference 1.5-2.1 mmol/L). No IgG antibodies against the intracellular onconeural antigens Yo, Hu, CV2/CRMP5, Ri, Ma1/2, SOX1, Tr, Zic4 or the intracellular synaptic antigens GAD65/amphiphysin were found (using Ravo line assay®). IgG antibodies against neuronal cell surface antigens (NMDA-R, AMPA-1/2-R, GABA-B-R, DPPX, LGI1, CASPR2) were negative (Euroimmun Biochip assay®). Positive “tissue-based assay” for unknown antineuronal antibodies with somatodendritic staining pattern binding to granule cells in the granule cell layer of the cerebellum and to neurites of hippocampal interneurons. |
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Basically inconspicuous, except for a discreet and query atrophy that was judged to be insignificant by neuroradiologists, and pineal cyst (with maximum sagittal diameter of up to 11.5 mm). |
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Intermittently generalized, rhythmic, frontally accentuated slow wave activity. The independent component analyses showed sharp spikes in component 4, arc-shaped theta (sometimes delta waves) in component 5, and delta waves (IRDAs) in component 6 ( |
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Unsuspicious brain metabolism. No lesions/metabolic changes suspicious of malignancy on whole-body FDG PET/computer tomography. |
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Inconspicuous resting electrocardiography. |