1. Gluten Ataxia and mGluR1 Autoimmune Encephalitis Presenting as Acute Cerebellar Ataxia: A Case Report.
- Author
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Tessendorf CD, Hueser JF, Wechsler B, and Amin NN
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Diagnosis, Differential, Hashimoto Disease diagnosis, Hashimoto Disease complications, Receptors, Metabotropic Glutamate, Diet, Gluten-Free, Autoantibodies blood, Middle Aged, Glutens adverse effects, Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System diagnosis, Cerebellar Ataxia diagnosis, Cerebellar Ataxia etiology, Encephalitis diagnosis, Celiac Disease diagnosis, Celiac Disease complications
- Abstract
A Caucasian male in his 60s presented with acute onset of dizziness, dysarthria, and gait ataxia. Upon extensive workup, positive findings were cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) showing lymphocytic pleocytosis with oligoclonal bands, positive celiac disease autoantibodies in blood, a duodenal biopsy indicating lymphocytic infiltration, and positive anti-mGluR1 antibody titers in CSF. The patient was started on a strict gluten-free diet and intravenous immunoglobulin therapy for 5 days and showed mild consecutive improvements each day of treatment. He was discharged after 22 days, and was encouraged to continue gluten adherence, physical and speech therapy, and follow up with neuroimmunology. This report demonstrates that autoimmune encephalitis due to anti-mGluR1antibodies and gluten ataxia are both immune-mediated disorders that should be considered in acute cerebellar ataxia cases. By broadening the differential diagnosis and a comprehensive CSF analysis, identification of gluten ataxia and autoimmune encephalitis were beneficial in the management of this particular patient., (Copyright© South Dakota State Medical Association.)
- Published
- 2024