Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis history and symptoms

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Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis Microchapters

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Differentiating Anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis from Other Diseases

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] AE Dheeraj Makkar, M.D.[2]

Overview

History

Symptoms

Anti-NMDAR encephalitis manifests as a condition that manifests in stages of progressive disease and recovery.

  • The majority of patients exhibit five phases of clinical presentation: a prodromal stage, psychotic and/or seizure phase, unresponsive and/or catatonic phase, hyperkinetic phase, and gradual recovery phase.

Prodromal Features occur mainly in children and include:

Other features are:

Symptoms
Psychiatric symptoms Neurologic symptoms
  • anxiety,
  • paranoia,
  • fear ,
  • psychosis
  • mania
  • insomnia
Movement Disorder : Orofacial dyskinesis are characterized by motions such as
  • Chewing, tongue protrusion, lip smacking, and facial grimacing
  • Pelvic thrusting, pseudo-piano playing gestures, and extremity writhing
  • Oculogyric crisis
  • Dystonia

Autonomic features:

  • Tachycardia, hypertension, and hyperthermia
  • Less commonly hypersalivation, urinary incontinence

Seizures:

  • Partial and generalized seizures, as well as status epilepticus, are possible, but partial seizures tend to predominate.
  • Unexplained new onset epilepsy in young women

Cognitive problems

Anti-NMDAR encephalitis has also been documented in a female adolescent with severe longitudinal myelitis and optic neuritis mimicking neuromyelitis optica and repeated relapses.

References

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