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Autoimmune Encephalitis
Author(s) -
Michael S. Zandi
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
focus the journal of lifelong learning in psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1541-4108
pISSN - 1541-4094
DOI - 10.1176/appi.focus.20160019
Subject(s) - prodrome , autoimmune encephalitis , psychosis , encephalitis , immunosuppression , multiple sclerosis , medicine , disease , immunology , limbic encephalitis , neurology , acute psychosis , acute disseminated encephalomyelitis , autoantibody , antibody , psychiatry , pathology , virus
Antibodies to brain cell-surface proteins have recently been identified in patients whose symptoms cross the boundary between neurology and psychiatry and are associated with syndromes that are responsive to treatment with immunosuppression-based treatments. This has led to an expansion in the field of autoimmune encephalitis. The common syndromes, with particular relevance to psychiatry, are discussed, in particular the N -methyl-d-aspartate receptor antibody encephalitis syndrome, which is most often associated with a psychosis and cognitive prodrome resembling acute or first-episode psychosis. The recognition, clinical diagnosis and associations, and evidence for disease mechanisms are discussed in this brief review.

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