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Psychiatric features in NMDAR and LGI1 antibody–associated autoimmune encephalitis.

Authors :
Jia, Yu
Li, Mingyu
Hu, Shimin
Leng, Haixia
Yang, Xiaotong
Xue, Qing
Zhang, Mengyao
Wang, Huifang
Huang, Zhaoyang
Wang, Hongxing
Ye, Jing
Liu, Aihua
Wang, Yuping
Source :
European Archives of Psychiatry & Clinical Neuroscience. Aug2024, Vol. 274 Issue 5, p1051-1061. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Patients with autoimmune encephalitis (AE) often developed psychiatric features during the disease course. Many studies focused on the psychiatric characteristic in anti-NMDAR encephalitis (NMDAR-E), but anti-LGI1 encephalitis (LGI1-E) had received less attention regarding the analysis of psychiatric features, and no study compared psychiatric characteristic between these two groups. The clinical data of AE patients (62 NMDAR-E and 20 LGI1-E) who developed psychiatric symptoms were analyzed in this study. In NMDAR-E, the most common higher-level feature was "behavior changes" (60/62, 96.8%) and the lower-level feature "incoherent speech" was observed in 33 patients (33/62, 53.2%), followed by "agitation" (29/62, 46.8%) and "incongruent laughter/crying" (20/62, 32.3%). Similar to NMDAR-E, "behavior changes" was most common in LGI1-E (17/20, 85.0%), but the features of suicidality, eating, and obsessive–compulsive were not reported. The top three lower-level features were visual hallucinations (9/20, 45.0%), incoherent speech (8/20, 40.0%), and mood instability (7/20, 35.0%). The comparative study found that "incongruent laughter/crying", in lower-level features, was more frequently observed in NMDAR-E (32.3% vs. 0%, p = 0.002). Moreover, the Bush Francis Catatonia Rating Scale (BFCRS) assessing the catatonic symptoms in NMDAR-E were higher than LGI1-E, but the 18 item-Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS-18) showed no difference in the two groups. In summary, both NMDAR-E and LGI1-E often developed psychiatric symptoms. In contrast with LGI1-E, the psychiatric feature "incongruent laughter/crying" was more frequently associated with NMDAR-E, and catatonic symptoms were more severe in NMDAR-E. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09401334
Volume :
274
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Archives of Psychiatry & Clinical Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178293859
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00406-023-01606-w