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Psychiatric Manifestation of Anti-LGI1 Encephalitis.

Dominique EndresHarald PrüssAndrea DressingJohanna SchneiderBernd FeigeTina SchweizerNils VenhoffKathrin NickelSophie MeixensbergerMiriam MatysikSimon J MaierKatharina DomschkeHorst UrbachPhilipp T MeyerLudger Tebartz van Elst
Published in: Brain sciences (2020)
This case study describes a patient with anti-LGI1 encephalitis in the chronified stage and a predominant long-lasting psychiatric course with atypical symptoms of psychosis and typical neurocognitive deficits. The patient's poor response to anti-inflammatory drugs was probably due to the delayed start of treatment. This delay in diagnosis and treatment may also have led to the FDG-PET findings, which were compatible with frontotemporal dementia ("state of damage"). In similar future cases, newly occurring epileptic seizures associated with psychiatric symptoms should trigger investigations for possible autoimmune encephalitis, even in patients with addiction or other pre-existing psychiatric conditions. This should in turn result in rapid organic clarification and-in positive cases-to anti-inflammatory treatment. Early treatment of anti-LGI1 encephalitis during the "inflammatory activity state" is crucial for overall prognosis and may avoid the development of dementia in some cases. Based on this case, the authors advocate the concept-long established in many chronic inflammatory diseases in rheumatology-of distinguishing between an "acute inflammatory state" and a "state of organ damage" in autoimmune psychosis resembling neurodegenerative mechanisms.
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