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Diagnosis of pediatric anti-NMDAR encephalitis at the onset: A clinical challenge.

Authors :
Ursitti, F.
Roberto, D.
Papetti, L.
Moavero, R.
Ferilli, M.A.N.
Fusco, L.
Vigevano, F.
Curatolo, P.
Valeriani, M.
Source :
European Journal of Paediatric Neurology; Jan2021, Vol. 30, p9-16, 8p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

To investigate the clinical and instrumental features at the onset addressing to the diagnosis of anti-NMDAR encephalitis. Twenty children (age: 15 months-17 years; 7 males, 13 females) with initial suspected diagnosis of autoimmune encephalitis, observed between January 2008 and March 2018, were included. The final diagnosis was anti-NMDAR encephalitis in 7 children, other/probable autoimmune encephalitis in 7 children, and primary psychosis in the remaining 6 children. At the clinical onset, anxiety disorder was the main symptom that helped in distinguishing the group of psychotic children from children with non-infectious encephalitis (P = 0.05 OR = 0.001), while epileptic seizures strongly predicted anti-NMDAR encephalitis (P = 0.04 OR = 28.6). At the onset, anti-NMDAR encephalitis could be distinguished from other/probable autoimmune encephalitis for the presence of sleep/wake rhythm alteration (P = 0.05 OR = 15). Among the symptoms occurring during the hospitalization, movement disorders (P = 0.031 OR = 12) were predictive of non-infectious encephalitis rather than primary psychosis. More specifically, the occurrence of language impairment (P = 0.03 OR = 33), epileptic seizures (P = 0.04 OR = 28.6) and catatonia (P = 0.03, OR = 33), were predictive of anti-NMDAR encephalitis. Also at this stage, anxiety disorder (P = 0.03 OR = 0.033) was predictive of primary psychosis. Our findings suggest that at the clinical onset epileptic seizures and sleep/wake rhythm alteration represent the main features addressing to the diagnosis of anti-NMDAR encephalitis rather than primary psychosis and other/probable autoimmune encephalitis, while anxiety disorder could be a solid predictor of primary psychosis. • Clinical presentation of pediatric anti-NMDAR encephalitis and psychosis can be overlapping. • Epilepsy and sleep/wake rhythm abnormalities characterize anti-NMDAR encephalitis onset. • Anxiety disorder is a strong predictor of psychosis. • Normal brain MRI does not exclude anti-NMDAR encephalitis. • CSF oligoclonal bands are more frequent in anti-NMDAR than other autoimmune encephalitis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10903798
Volume :
30
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
European Journal of Paediatric Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149510726
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpn.2020.12.004