24 results on '"Al-Diwani A"'
Search Results
2. Regulatory T cell profiles in patients with -methyl-ᴅ-aspartate receptor-antibody encephalitis
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Mildred A. Iro, Christine S. Rollier, Sarosh R. Irani, Manish Sadarangani, Adam Al-Diwani, Andrew J. Pollard, and Elizabeth A. Clutterbuck
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brain inflammation ,suppressor t cells ,regulatory t cells ,ccr6 receptors ,Infectious and parasitic diseases ,RC109-216 ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
Purpose Purpose Regulatory T cells (Tregs) have been implicated in the pathogenesis of several autoimmune disorders and used in adoptive cell transfer therapies. Neither have been explored in patients with autoimmune encephalitis where treated patient outcomes remain suboptimal with frequent relapses. Here, to identify new treatment strategies for autoimmune encephalitis, we sought to evaluate the proportion of circulating Tregs and Treg subpopulations in peripheral blood of patients with N-methyl-ᴅ-aspartate receptor-antibody encephalitis (NMDAR-Ab-E) and compared this with healthy controls. Methods We compared the phenotype of peripheral blood Tregs in four adult NMDAR-Ab-E patients and four age- and sex-matched healthy controls using an 11-color flow cytometry assay panel for characterization of Tregs (CD4+ CD25+ FoxP3+) cells into naïve (chemokine receptor [CCR] 7+ CD45RA+), central memory (CCR7+ CD45RA–), and effector memory (CCR7– CD45RA–) cells. We also examined and compared the expression of the CCR6 by circulating Tregs and the respective Treg subpopulations between the study groups. Results The proportion of circulating Tregs was similar between patients with NMDAR-Ab-E and healthy controls but the proportion of naïve Tregs was lower in NMDAR-Ab-E patients (p = 0.0026). Additionally, the frequency of circulating effector memory Tregs was higher, and the proportion of circulating effector memory Tregs expressing CCR6 was lower, in NMDAR-Ab-E patients compared with healthy controls (p = 0.0026). Conclusion Altered Treg homeostasis may be a feature of patients with NMDAR-Ab-E. Future studies with larger samples are warranted to validate these findings.
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- 2023
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3. Diagnosis and initial management of children presenting with premature loss of primary teeth associated with a systemic condition: A scoping review and development of clinical aid.
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Heggie, Claudia, Al‐Diwani, Hiba, Arundel, Paul, and Balmer, Richard
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INBORN errors of metabolism diagnosis ,MEDICAL information storage & retrieval systems ,METALS in the body ,INBORN errors of metabolism ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,DECIDUOUS teeth ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,PAPILLON Lefevre syndrome ,DENTISTS ,LITERATURE reviews ,DECIDUOUS dentition (Tooth development) ,CHILDREN'S dental care ,TOOTH loss ,DISEASE complications - Abstract
Background: Premature loss of primary teeth (PLPT) can be a rare presentation of systemic medical conditions. Premature loss of primary teeth may present a diagnostic dilemma to paediatric dentists. Aims: To identify systemic conditions associated with PLPT and develop a clinical aid. Design: OVID Medline, Embase and Web of Science were searched up to March 2023. Citation searching of review publications occurred. Exclusion occurred for conference abstracts, absence of PLPT and absence of English‐language full text. Results: Seven hundred and ninety‐one publications were identified via databases and 476 by citation searching of review articles. Removal of 390 duplicates occurred. Following the exclusion of 466 records on abstract review, 411 publications were sought for retrieval, of which 142 met inclusion criteria. Thirty‐one systemic conditions were identified. For 19 conditions, only one publication was identified. The majority of publications, 91% (n = 129), were case reports or series. Most publications, 44% (n = 62), were related to hypophosphatasia, and 25% (n = 35) were related to Papillon–Lefèvre. Diagnostic features were synthesised, and a clinical aid was produced by an iterative consensus approach. Conclusions: A diverse range of systemic diseases are associated with PLPT. Evidence quality, however, is low, with most diseases having a low number of supporting cases. This clinical aid supports paediatric dentists in differential diagnosis and onward referral. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Multi‐site Ultrasound‐guided Fine Needle Aspiration to Study Cells and Soluble Factors From Human Lymph Nodes.
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Al‐Diwani, Adam, Agrawal, Deepsha, Sheerin, Fintan, Board, Callum, Irani, Sarosh R., Pollock, Katrina M., and Provine, Nicholas M.
- Published
- 2024
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5. The psychopathology of NMDAR-antibody encephalitis in adults: a systematic review and phenotypic analysis of individual patient data
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Al-Diwani, Adam, Handel, Adam, Townsend, Leigh, Pollak, Thomas, Leite, M Isabel, Harrison, Paul J, Lennox, Belinda R, Okai, David, Manohar, Sanjay G, and Irani, Sarosh R
- Published
- 2019
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6. N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor-Antibody Encephalitis Impairs Maintenance of Attention to Items in Working Memory.
- Author
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Dor, Afrose, Harrison, Corin, Irani, Sarosh R., Al-Diwani, Adam, Grogan, John, and Manohar, Sanjay
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SHORT-term memory ,ENCEPHALITIS ,METHYL aspartate ,METHYL aspartate receptors ,ATTENTION - Abstract
NMDA receptors (NMDARs) may be crucial to working memory (WM). Computational models predict that they sustain neural firing and produce associative memory, which may underpin maintaining and binding information, respectively. We test this in patients with antibodies to NMDAR (n = 10, female) and compare them with healthy control participants (n = 55, 20 male, 35 female). Patients were tested after recovery with a task that separates two aspects of WM: sustaining attention and feature binding. Participants had to remember two colored arrows. Then attention was directed to one of them. After a variable delay, they reported the direction of either the same arrow (congruent cue) or of the other arrow (incongruent cue). We asked how congruency affected recall precision and measured types of error. Patients had difficulty in both sustaining attention to an item over time and feature binding. Controls were less precise after longer delays and incongruent cues. In contrast, patients did not benefit from congruent cues at longer delays [group x congruency (long condition); p = 0.041], indicating they could not sustain attention. Additionally, patients reported the wrong item (misbinding errors) more than controls after congruent cues [group x delay (congruent condition), main effect of group; p≤0.001]. Our results suggest NMDARs are critical for both maintaining attention and feature binding. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. LGI1-antibody encephalitis: how to approach this highly treatable dementia mimic in memory and mental health services.
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Binks, Sophie N. M., Al-Diwani, Adam, Handel, Adam E., Bajorek, Tomasz, Manohar, Sanjay, Husain, Masud, Irani, Sarosh R., and Koychev, Ivan
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MENTAL health services ,DEMENTIA ,ENCEPHALITIS ,OLDER patients ,COGNITION disorders - Abstract
Leucine-rich glioma-inactivated 1-antibody-encephalitis is a treatable and potentially reversible cause of cognitive and psychiatric presentations, and may mimic cognitive decline, rapidly progressive dementia and complex psychosis in older patients. This aetiology is of immediate relevance given the alternative treatment pathway required, compared with other conditions presenting with cognitive deficits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Fine needle aspiration of human lymph nodes reveals cell populations and soluble interactors pivotal to immunological priming.
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Provine, Nicholas M., Al‐Diwani, Adam, Agarwal, Devika, Dooley, Kyla, Heslington, Amelia, Murchison, Andrew G., Garner, Lucy C., Sheerin, Fintan, Klenerman, Paul, and Irani, Sarosh R.
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NEEDLE biopsy ,LYMPH nodes ,CELL populations ,GERMINAL centers ,TRANSCRIPTOMES ,LUPUS nephritis ,LYMPHADENITIS - Abstract
Lymph node (LN) fine needle aspiration (LN FNA) represents a powerful technique for minimally invasive sampling of human LNs in vivo and has been used effectively to directly study aspects of the human germinal center response. However, systematic deep phenotyping of the cellular populations and cell‐free proteins recovered by LN FNA has not been performed. Thus, we studied human cervical LN FNAs as a proof‐of‐concept and used single‐cell RNA‐sequencing and proteomic analysis to benchmark this compartment, define the purity of LN FNA material, and facilitate future studies in this immunologically pivotal environment. Our data provide evidence that LN FNAs contain bone‐fide LN‐resident innate immune populations, with minimal contamination of blood material. Examination of these populations reveals unique biology not predictable from equivalent blood‐derived populations. LN FNA supernatants represent a specific source of lymph‐ and lymph node‐derived proteins, and can, aided by transcriptomics, identify likely receptor–ligand interactions. This represents the first description of the types and abundance of immune cell populations and cell‐free proteins that can be efficiently studied by LN FNA. These findings are of broad utility for understanding LN physiology in health and disease, including infectious or autoimmune perturbations, and in the case of cervical nodes, neuroscience. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Should junior doctors strike?
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Toynbee, Mark, Al-Diwani, Adam AJ, Clacey, Joe, and Broome, Matthew R
- Published
- 2016
10. Hippocampal Functional Dynamics Are Clinically Implicated in Autoimmune Encephalitis With Faciobrachial Dystonic Seizures
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Julia C. Nantes, Adam G. Thomas, Natalie L. Voets, Jonathan G. Best, Clive R. Rosenthal, Adam Al-Diwani, Sarosh R. Irani, and Charlotte J. Stagg
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seizures ,hippocampus ,fMRI ,LGI1 ,cognitive impairment ,Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system ,RC346-429 - Abstract
This is the first study to investigate functional brain activity in patients affected by autoimmune encephalitis with faciobrancial dystonic seizures (FBDS). Multimodal 3T MRI scans, including structural neuroimaging (T1-weighted, diffusion weighted) and functional neuroimaging (scene-encoding task known to activate hippocampal regions), were performed. This case series analysis included eight patients treated for autoimmune encephalitis with FBDS, scanned during the convalescent phase of their condition (median 1.1 years post-onset), and eight healthy volunteers. Compared to controls, 50% of patients showed abnormal hippocampal activity during scene-encoding relative to familiar scene-viewing. Higher peak FBDS frequency was significantly related to lower hippocampal activity during scene-encoding (p = 0.02), though not to markers of hippocampal microstructure (mean diffusivity, p = 0.3) or atrophy (normalized volume, p = 0.4). During scene-encoding, stronger within-medial temporal lobe (MTL) functional connectivity correlated with poorer Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-Revised memory score (p = 0.03). These findings suggest that in autoimmune encephalitis, frequent seizures may have a long-term impact on hippocampal activity, beyond that of structural damage. These observations also suggest a potential approach to determine on-going MTL performance in this condition to guide long-term management and future clinical trials.
- Published
- 2018
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11. Psychosis: an autoimmune disease?
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Al‐Diwani, Adam A. J., Pollak, Thomas A., Irani, Sarosh R., and Lennox, Belinda R.
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- 2017
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12. Improving the safety and efficiency of outpatient lumbar puncture service
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Mark Sweeney, Adam Al-Diwani, and Robert Hadden
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Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
AbstractLumbar puncture (LP) is a commonly performed procedure in diagnosis and management of neurological conditions. LP is generally safe, however there are a number of potentially serious complications, including epidural haematoma and cerebral herniation. The risks of these should be considered and minimised prior to undertaking LP.Our regional neuroscience centre provides an outpatient LP service for patients throughout southeast England. Referrals from distant hospitals meant there was frequently no access to important clinical information, including indication for LP, past medical history, or medication history until the day of the procedure, and no access to results of investigations such as coagulation profile, platelet count, or intracranial imaging. Furthermore, there was limited capacity or time available in the day ward to perform these tests prior to LP. As a result, patients were either having LPs cancelled on the day of the procedure, were delayed by several hours on the day of the procedure for investigations, or were subject to the risk of having the LP performed without the knowledge of these key safety indicators.To address this issue we implemented an LP safety checklist to be completed by referring neurologists, providing details of the patient’s medical history and results of investigations performed locally. In doing this, we increased the proportion of patients with an available platelet count prior to LP from 25% to 89%, and available coagulation profile from 18% to 82%. In addition, we saw a qualitative increase in the confidence of junior doctors in the safety of the LP clinic, as measured by a survey taken before and after the implementation of this system.This simple intervention made a rapid and remarkable difference to the safety and efficiency of this outpatient LP clinic. We would encourage other units to adopt this approach to address similar problems in a variety of outpatient settings.
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- 2016
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13. A Cys-loop Mutation in the Caenorhabditis elegans Nicotinic Receptor Subunit UNC-63 Impairs but Does Not Abolish Channel Function
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Jones, Andrew K., Rayes, Diego, Al-Diwani, Adam, Maynard, Thomas P.R., Jones, Rachel, Hernando, Guillermina, Buckingham, Steven D., Bouzat, Cecilia, and Sattelle, David B.
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- 2011
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14. Clinical relevance of serum antibodies to extracellular N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor epitopes
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Zandi, Michael S, Paterson, Ross W, Ellul, Mark A, Jacobson, Leslie, Al-Diwani, Adam, Jones, Joanne L, Cox, Amanda L, Lennox, Belinda, Stamelou, Maria, Bhatia, Kailash P, Schott, Jonathan M, Coles, Alasdair J, Kullmann, Dimitri M, and Vincent, Angela
- Published
- 2015
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15. Cell-surface central nervous system autoantibodies: Clinical relevance and emerging paradigms
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Irani, Sarosh R., Gelfand, Jeffrey M., Al-Diwani, Adam, and Vincent, Angela
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- 2014
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16. Detection and significance of neuronal autoantibodies in patients with meningoencephalitis in Vientiane, Lao PDR.
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Uy, Christopher E, Mayxay, Mayfong, Harrison, Ruby, Al-Diwani, Adam, Jacobson, Leslie, Rattanavong, Sayaphet, Dubot-Pérès, Audrey, Vongsouvath, Manivanh, Davong, Viengmon, Chansamouth, Vilada, Phommasone, Koukeo, Waters, Patrick, Irani, Sarosh R, and Newton, Paul N
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CENTRAL nervous system infections ,GABA receptors ,MENINGOENCEPHALITIS ,AUTOANTIBODIES ,CEREBROSPINAL fluid - Abstract
Background The importance of autoimmune encephalitis and its overlap with infectious encephalitides are not well investigated in South-East Asia. Methods We report autoantibody testing, using antigen-specific live cell-based assays, in a series of 134 patients (cerebrospinal fluid and sera) and 55 blood donor controls (sera), undergoing lumbar puncture for suspected meningoencephalitis admitted in Vientiane, Lao People's Democratic Republic (PDR). Results Eight of 134 (6%) patients showed detectable serum neuronal autoantibodies, against the N-methyl-D-aspartate and gamma-aminobutyric acid A receptors (NMDAR and GABA
A R), and contactin-associated protein-like 2 (CASPR2). Three of eight patients had accompanying autoantibodies in cerebrospinal fluid (two with NMDAR and one with GABAA R antibodies), and in two of these the clinical syndromes were typical of autoimmune encephalitis. Three of the other five patients had proven central nervous system infections, highlighting a complex overlap between diverse infectious and autoimmune causes of encephalitis. No patients in this cohort were treated with immunotherapy, and the outcomes were poor, with improvement observed in a single patient. Conclusions In Lao PDR, autoimmune encephalitis is underdiagnosed and has a poor prognosis. Empiric immunotherapy should be considered after treatable infectious aetiologies are considered unlikely. Awareness and diagnostic testing resources for autoimmune encephalitis should be enhanced in South-East Asia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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17. Cervical lymph nodes and ovarian teratomas as germinal centres in NMDA receptor-antibody encephalitis.
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Al-Diwani, Adam, Theorell, Jakob, Damato, Valentina, Bull, Joshua, McGlashan, Nicholas, Green, Edward, Kienzler, Anne Kathrin, Harrison, Ruby, Hassanali, Tasneem, Campo, Leticia, Browne, Molly, Easton, Alistair, majd, Hooman Soleymani, Tenaka, Keiko, Iorio, Raffaele, Dale, Russell C, Harrison, Paul, Geddes, John, Quested, Digby, and Sharp, David
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AUTOANTIBODIES , *IMMUNOGLOBULINS , *OVARIAN tumors , *LYMPHOID tissue , *CELL receptors , *TERATOMA , *RESEARCH funding , *LYMPHATICS - Abstract
Autoantibodies against the extracellular domain of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) NR1 subunit cause a severe and common form of encephalitis. To better understand their generation, we aimed to characterize and identify human germinal centres actively participating in NMDAR-specific autoimmunization by sampling patient blood, CSF, ovarian teratoma tissue and, directly from the putative site of human CNS lymphatic drainage, cervical lymph nodes. From serum, both NR1-IgA and NR1-IgM were detected more frequently in NMDAR-antibody encephalitis patients versus controls (both P < 0.0001). Within patients, ovarian teratoma status was associated with a higher frequency of NR1-IgA positivity in serum (OR = 3.1; P < 0.0001) and CSF (OR = 3.8, P = 0.047), particularly early in disease and before ovarian teratoma resection. Consistent with this immunoglobulin class bias, ovarian teratoma samples showed intratumoral production of both NR1-IgG and NR1-IgA and, by single cell RNA sequencing, contained expanded highly-mutated IgA clones with an ovarian teratoma-restricted B cell population. Multiplex histology suggested tertiary lymphoid architectures in ovarian teratomas with dense B cell foci expressing the germinal centre marker BCL6, CD21+ follicular dendritic cells, and the NR1 subunit, alongside lymphatic vessels and high endothelial vasculature. Cultured teratoma explants and dissociated intratumoral B cells secreted NR1-IgGs in culture. Hence, ovarian teratomas showed structural and functional evidence of NR1-specific germinal centres. On exploring classical secondary lymphoid organs, B cells cultured from cervical lymph nodes of patients with NMDAR-antibody encephalitis produced NR1-IgG in 3/7 cultures, from patients with the highest serum NR1-IgG levels (P < 0.05). By contrast, NR1-IgG secretion was observed neither from cervical lymph nodes in disease controls nor in patients with adequately resected ovarian teratomas. Our multimodal evaluations provide convergent anatomical and functional evidence of NMDAR-autoantibody production from active germinal centres within both intratumoral tertiary lymphoid structures and traditional secondary lymphoid organs, the cervical lymph nodes. Furthermore, we develop a cervical lymph node sampling protocol that can be used to directly explore immune activity in health and disease at this emerging neuroimmune interface. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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18. In Vivo N-Methyl-d-Aspartate Receptor (NMDAR) Density as Assessed Using Positron Emission Tomography During Recovery From NMDAR-Antibody Encephalitis.
- Author
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Galovic, Marian, Al-Diwani, Adam, Vivekananda, Umesh, Walker, Matthew C., Irani, Sarosh R., and Koepp, Matthias J.
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- 2023
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19. N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antibody production from germinal center reactions: Therapeutic implications.
- Author
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Makuch, Mateusz, Wilson, Robert, Al‐Diwani, Adam, Varley, James, Kienzler, Anne‐Kathrin, Taylor, Jennifer, Berretta, Antonio, Fowler, Darren, Lennox, Belinda, Leite, M. Isabel, Waters, Patrick, Irani, Sarosh R., Al-Diwani, Adam, and Kienzler, Anne-Kathrin
- Subjects
IMMUNOGLOBULIN analysis ,ASPARTATE receptors ,GERMINAL centers ,B cells ,LIGAND analysis - Abstract
Introduction: N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) antibody encephalitis is mediated by immunoglobulin G (IgG) autoantibodies directed against the NR1 subunit of the NMDAR. Around 20% of patients have an underlying ovarian teratoma, and the condition responds to early immunotherapies and ovarian teratoma removal. However, despite clear therapeutic relevance, mechanisms of NR1-IgG production and the contribution of germinal center B cells to NR1-IgG levels are unknown.Methods: Clinical data and longitudinal paired serum NR1-reactive IgM and IgG levels from 10 patients with NMDAR-antibody encephalitis were determined. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells from these 10 patients, and two available ovarian teratomas, were stimulated with combinations of immune factors and tested for secretion of total IgG and NR1-specific antibodies.Results: In addition to disease-defining NR1-IgG, serum NR1-IgM was found in 6 of 10 patients. NR1-IgM levels were typically highest around disease onset and detected for several months into the disease course. Moreover, circulating patient B cells were differentiated into CD19+ CD27++ CD38++ antibody-secreting cells in vitro and, from 90% of patients, secreted NR1-IgM and NR1-IgG. Secreted levels of NR1-IgG correlated with serum NR1-IgG (p < 0.0001), and this was observed across the varying disease durations, suggestive of an ongoing process. Furthermore, ovarian teratoma tissue contained infiltrating lymphocytes which produced NR1-IgG in culture.Interpretation: Serum NR1-IgM and NR1-IgG, alongside the consistent production of NR1-IgG from circulating B cells and from ovarian teratomas suggest that ongoing germinal center reactions may account for the peripheral cell populations which secrete NR1-IgG. Cells participating in germinal center reactions might be a therapeutic target for the treatment of NMDAR-antibody encephalitis. Ann Neurol 2018;83:553-561. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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20. Hippocampal Functional Dynamics Are Clinically Implicated in Autoimmune Encephalitis With Faciobrachial Dystonic Seizures.
- Author
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Nantes, Julia C., Thomas, Adam G., Voets, Natalie L., Best, Jonathan G., Rosenthal, Clive R., Al-Diwani, Adam, Irani, Sarosh R., and Stagg, Charlotte J.
- Subjects
HIPPOCAMPUS (Brain) ,ENCEPHALITIS - Abstract
This is the first study to investigate functional brain activity in patients affected by autoimmune encephalitis with faciobrancial dystonic seizures (FBDS). Multimodal 3T MRI scans, including structural neuroimaging (T1-weighted, diffusion weighted) and functional neuroimaging (scene-encoding task known to activate hippocampal regions), were performed. This case series analysis included eight patients treated for autoimmune encephalitis with FBDS, scanned during the convalescent phase of their condition (median 1.1 years post-onset), and eight healthy volunteers. Compared to controls, 50% of patients showed abnormal hippocampal activity during scene-encoding relative to familiar scene-viewing. Higher peak FBDS frequency was significantly related to lower hippocampal activity during scene-encoding (p = 0.02), though not to markers of hippocampal microstructure (mean diffusivity, p = 0.3) or atrophy (normalized volume, p = 0.4). During scene-encoding, stronger within-medial temporal lobe (MTL) functional connectivity correlated with poorer Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-Revised memory score (p = 0.03). These findings suggest that in autoimmune encephalitis, frequent seizures may have a long-term impact on hippocampal activity, beyond that of structural damage. These observations also suggest a potential approach to determine on-going MTL performance in this condition to guide long-term management and future clinical trials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Synaptic and Neuronal Autoantibody-Associated Psychiatric Syndromes: Controversies and Hypotheses.
- Author
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Al-Diwani, Adam, Pollak, Thomas A., Langford, Alexander E., and Lennox, Belinda R.
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THERAPEUTIC use of immunoglobulins ,PSYCHIATRIC diagnosis ,PATHOLOGICAL psychology - Abstract
Autoimmune encephalitis (AE) mediated by antibodies against synaptic and neuronal surface targets frequently presents with a psychiatric syndrome. In these patients, removal of autoantibodies treats the disease and outcomes are closely linked to early intervention. The discovery of these autoantibodies in isolated psychiatric syndromes has raised the possibility that these patients may derive similar benefits from immunotherapy, a potentially transformational approach to the treatment of mental illness. Although open-label case series suggest impressive therapeutic outcomes, the pathological relevance of these autoantibodies outside of canonical presentations is debated. The advent of diagnostic criteria for AE attempts to facilitate its prompt identification but risks prematurely neglecting the potential scientific and clinical significance of isolated syndromes that do not satisfy these criteria. Here, we propose using a syndrome-level taxonomy that has occasional, but not necessary, overlap with AE: synaptic and neuronal autoantibody-associated psychiatric syndromes or "SNAps". This will prevent confusion with AE and act heuristically to promote active investigation into this rare example of psychopathology defined on a molecular level. We suggest that this concept would have application in other autoantibody-associated syndromes including seizure, cognitive, and movement disorders, in which similar issues arise. We review putative direct and indirect mechanisms and outline experimentally testable hypotheses that would help to determine prospectively in whom autoantibody detection is relevant, and as important, in whom it is not. We summarize a pragmatic approach to autoantibody testing and management in severe mental illness in order to promptly diagnose AE and advocate a research-orientated experimental medicine paradigm for SNAps, where there is greater equipoise. We conclude that SNAps remains a nascent area of clinical neuroscience with great potential and in ongoing need of psychiatry-led basic and clinical research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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22. What is the best method to ensure informed consent is valid for orthodontic treatment? A trial to assess long-term recall and comprehension.
- Author
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Carter, A. and Al-Diwani, H.
- Subjects
LONG-term memory ,CORRECTIVE orthodontics ,PERCENTILES ,ANXIETY ,RANDOM number generators ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,GENERATORS of groups - Abstract
Design Single-blind randomised controlled trial. Intervention Patient and parent pairs were randomly assigned via a random number generator to Group A or B. Both groups were given ten minutes to read a modified consent document. Group A (rehearsal) were given printouts that showed images of four core and four custom risks with handwritten descriptions of each risk and consequences. Group B were given an audio-visual presentation instead (PowerPoint). Interviews of each group were completed immediately after the informed consent and at six-month follow-up to assess recall and comprehension of information provided. Case selection Patients aged 11-18 years old and their parents attending for comprehensive orthodontic treatment at Ohio State University graduate orthodontic clinic. All subjects needed to be able to communicate in English, have no developmental disabilities or urgent medical conditions and neither the patients or parents or subjects' siblings were to have had orthodontic treatment in the last five years. Data analysis 1) Exploratory analysis to test for differences in demographics and anxiety between the two groups; 2) Multiple linear regression analysis was used to assess percentage of accurate responses at baseline and six months and the change between the two different groups, with differing baseline characteristics (p <0.05 was considered statistically significant); and 3) Intra- and inter-rater reliability was assessed using intra-class correlation. Results There were no significant differences in information retention and understanding between the two methods at six-month follow-up. For both groups, recall was significantly lower six months following consent-taking. Specific domains whereby information recall and comprehension are poor include: treatment method, risks, resorption and discomfort. Conclusions There is no superior method of consent-taking to ensure patients' and parents' information retention in the months following commencement of treatment. However, the study highlighted that current consent practices which are considered 'best practice' may be deficient. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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23. Acute onset of focal seizures, psychiatric features and confusion: a case of autoimmune encephalitis?
- Author
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Al-Diwani, Adam, Butterworth, Richard J., Nibber, Anjan, Lang, Bethan, Vincent, Angela, and Irani, Sarosh R.
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ENCEPHALITIS diagnosis ,COGNITION disorders ,SEIZURES (Medicine) ,ENCEPHALITIS ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,SPASMS ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,EVALUATION ,OLD age - Published
- 2012
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24. Routine identification of cognitive impairment in acute internal medicine: A service improvement project.
- Author
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Al-Diwani, A.A.J., Nagella, H.B., Chandrasekharan, D.P., Kapacee, F., Carr, F., and Pendlebury, S.T.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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