Autoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.

The field of autoimmune encephalopathies has expanded rapidly in the last few years. It is now well-established that a substantial proportion of encephalitides are associated with autoantibodies directed against the extracellular domains of cell-surface proteins which are critical in the regulation...

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Main Authors: Irani, SR, Vincent, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2011
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author Irani, SR
Vincent, A
author_facet Irani, SR
Vincent, A
author_sort Irani, SR
collection OXFORD
description The field of autoimmune encephalopathies has expanded rapidly in the last few years. It is now well-established that a substantial proportion of encephalitides are associated with autoantibodies directed against the extracellular domains of cell-surface proteins which are critical in the regulation of neuronal excitability. These include LGI1, CASPR2, contactin-2 (VGKC-complex antibodies), and the NMDA, AMPA, and GABA(B) receptors. The clinical importance of these conditions lies in their frequent immunotherapy-response and, less commonly, their association with distinctive tumors. Studies which have examined cohorts of patients defined by these serum antibodies have identified a number of clinical features that have helped understand the core phenotypes of these conditions. In addition, sensitive antibody assays have allowed the expansion of the phenotypes to include a minority of patients with isolated epilepsies or psychoses. There is also evidence that autoimmune encephalitis may progress to adult-onset hippocampal sclerosis. Clinical, and accumulating scientific, data strongly suggest direct pathogenicity of these autoantibodies. The generation of the autoantibody, in some patients, can be explained by the presence of tumors which express their antigenic target. Serum antibody levels are higher than their levels in CSF in the vast majority of cases. However, the majority of patients do not harbor a tumor and the etiology of the disease in these patients is less clear. Below, we suggest models for the etiology and pathogenic mechanisms of these autoantibodies by incorporating concepts such as serum generation of the autoantibodies, the blood-brain barrier, intrathecal antibody production, and prodromal infections.
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spelling oxford-uuid:53a61dc6-ab74-4cf6-bc1f-4b78748ab9302022-03-26T16:33:03ZAutoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:53a61dc6-ab74-4cf6-bc1f-4b78748ab930EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2011Irani, SRVincent, AThe field of autoimmune encephalopathies has expanded rapidly in the last few years. It is now well-established that a substantial proportion of encephalitides are associated with autoantibodies directed against the extracellular domains of cell-surface proteins which are critical in the regulation of neuronal excitability. These include LGI1, CASPR2, contactin-2 (VGKC-complex antibodies), and the NMDA, AMPA, and GABA(B) receptors. The clinical importance of these conditions lies in their frequent immunotherapy-response and, less commonly, their association with distinctive tumors. Studies which have examined cohorts of patients defined by these serum antibodies have identified a number of clinical features that have helped understand the core phenotypes of these conditions. In addition, sensitive antibody assays have allowed the expansion of the phenotypes to include a minority of patients with isolated epilepsies or psychoses. There is also evidence that autoimmune encephalitis may progress to adult-onset hippocampal sclerosis. Clinical, and accumulating scientific, data strongly suggest direct pathogenicity of these autoantibodies. The generation of the autoantibody, in some patients, can be explained by the presence of tumors which express their antigenic target. Serum antibody levels are higher than their levels in CSF in the vast majority of cases. However, the majority of patients do not harbor a tumor and the etiology of the disease in these patients is less clear. Below, we suggest models for the etiology and pathogenic mechanisms of these autoantibodies by incorporating concepts such as serum generation of the autoantibodies, the blood-brain barrier, intrathecal antibody production, and prodromal infections.
spellingShingle Irani, SR
Vincent, A
Autoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.
title Autoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.
title_full Autoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.
title_fullStr Autoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.
title_full_unstemmed Autoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.
title_short Autoimmune encephalitis -- new awareness, challenging questions.
title_sort autoimmune encephalitis new awareness challenging questions
work_keys_str_mv AT iranisr autoimmuneencephalitisnewawarenesschallengingquestions
AT vincenta autoimmuneencephalitisnewawarenesschallengingquestions