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Neuropsychiatric Autoimmune Encephalitis without VGKC-Complex, NMDAR, and GAD Autoantibodies: Case Report and Literature Review
Najjar, Souhel; Pearlman, Daniel; Devinsky, Orrin; Najjar, Amanda; Nadkarni, Siddhartha; Butler, Tracy; Zagzag, David
We report a patient with a seronegative autoimmune panencephalitis, adding a subtype to the emerging spectrum of seronegative autoimmune encephalitis, and we review the sparse literature on isolated psychiatric presentations of autoimmune encephalitis. (A PubMed search for "seronegative autoimmune encephalitis," "nonvasculitic autoimmune inflammatory meningoencephalitis," and related terms revealed <25 cases.) A 15-year-old girl developed an acute-onset isolated psychosis with prominent negative symptoms and intermittent encephalopathy. Despite clinical worsening, her brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans remained normal for 7 years. Serology was negative for voltage-gated potassium channel (VGKC)-complex, N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR), and glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) autoantibodies. We excluded genetic, metabolic, paraneoplastic, degenerative, and infectious etiologies. The patient's symptoms remitted fully with immune therapy, but recurred in association with widespread bihemispheric brain lesions. Brain biopsy revealed mild nonvasculitic inflammation and prominent vascular hyalinization. Immune therapy with plasma exchanges cleared the MRI abnormalities but, 10 years after onset, the patient still suffers neuropsychiatric sequelae. We conclude that autoimmune panencephalitis seronegative for VGKC-complex, NMDAR, and GAD autoantibodies is a subtype of autoimmune encephalitis that can present with pure neuropsychiatric features and a normal brain MRI. Immunologic mechanisms may account for psychiatric symptoms in a subset of patients now diagnosed with classical psychotic disorders. Delay in starting immune therapy can lead to permanent neuropsychiatric sequelae. We propose a standardized classification system for the autoimmune encephalitides, integrating earlier pathology-oriented terms with more recently defined serologic and clinical phenotypes.
PMID: 23538571
ISSN: 1543-3633
CID: 271382
Posttraumatic epilepsy
Chapter by: Luciano, Daniel J; Alper, Kenneth; Nadkarni, Siddhartha
in: Textbook of traumatic brain injury by Silver, Jonathan M.; McAllister, Thomas W; Yudofsky, Stuart C [Eds]
Washington, DC : American Psychiatric Pub., c2011
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 1585623571
CID: 426892
Psychosis in epilepsy patients
Nadkarni, Siddhartha; Arnedo, Vanessa; Devinsky, Orrin
Epileptic psychoses reflect a fundamental disruption in the fidelity of mind and occur during seizure freedom or during or after seizures. The psychotic symptoms in epilepsy share some qualities with schizophrenic psychosis, such as positive symptoms of paranoid delusions and hallucinations. Psychotic syndromes in epilepsy are most common but not exclusively associated with temporal lobe epilepsy. De Novo psychosis following epilepsy surgery is rare. Forced normalization-psychosis associated with dramatic reduction of epileptiform activity or seizures is described in small series only. Ictal and postictal psychosis can be prevented with seizure control, but postictal and chronic interictal psychoses require multidisciplinary and psychopharmacologic management
PMID: 18047594
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 75714
Anterior cingulate epilepsy in an 18-year-old woman [Case Report]
Madhavan, Deepak; Liebman, Tracey; Nadkarni, Siddhartha; Devinsky, Orrin
Anterior cingulate epilepsy is a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge, with a broad range of nonspecific symptoms. Seizures can arise from any region of the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and manifest distinctive features based on the area of onset and pattern of spread. These features may provide insight as to the origin of the seizures, but because the ACC integrates information from several networks involving emotional and executive functions and has a diverse cytoarchitecture, functional-structural correlates are complex. Further, the location of the ACC within the interhemispheric fissure limits the capacity of scalp electrodes to record seizure activity from this region. This case review illustrates one part of the spectrum of cingulate epilepsy and discusses clinical features of the disorder
PMID: 17514157
ISSN: 1545-2913
CID: 73846
Pitfalls of diagnosing epilepsy: a case report [Case Report]
Nadkarni, Siddhartha S
PMID: 17044818
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 71409
Psychotropic effects of antiepileptic drugs
Nadkarni, Siddhartha; Devinsky, Orrin
Antiepileptic drugs are important psychotropic agents that are commonly used to treat psychiatric disorders. The behavioral effects of antiepileptic drugs may differ between epilepsy and psychiatric patient populations. Randomized, double-blind, controlled data on the psychotropic efficacy of antiepileptic drugs are limited mainly to bipolar disorder
PMCID:1201637
PMID: 16175217
ISSN: 1535-7597
CID: 60146
Current treatments of epilepsy
Nadkarni, Siddhartha; LaJoie, Josiane; Devinsky, Orrin
Medical therapy is the mainstay for epilepsy, with most patients well controlled on a single antiepileptic drug (AED). In this non-refractory group, many patients have medication side effects and occasional seizures. Approximately 30% of patients with partial epilepsy and 25% of patients with generalized epilepsy are not well controlled on medications. These patients are often receiving multiple AEDs, with disabling seizures and side effects. Although second-generation AEDs are safer and better tolerated than the older AEDs, there are scant data to support significant advantages in efficacy. In VA studies with older AEDS, therapy with two AEDs improved seizure control in 40% of patients but seizure freedom was achieved in only 9%. A meta-analysis of the second-generation AEDs used as adjunctive therapies shows that 12% to 29% of patients had a 50% or greater reduction in seizure frequency. Surgery and the vagus nerve stimulator provide important therapeutic options in patients whose seizures are not controlled by AEDs. Special considerations about epilepsy care must be made in pediatric populations, those with developmental delays, women, and the elderly
PMID: 15994220
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 58984