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Neuropsychiatric Disorders Due to Limbic Encephalitis: Immunologic Aspect

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22010389

Keywords

limbic encephalitis; neuropsychiatric; neuronal cell-surface antibody; onconeural antibody; paraneoplastic neurologic syndrome

Funding

  1. [100-EDN03]
  2. [101-EDN01]
  3. [NCKUEDA10211]

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Limbic encephalitis is a rare neurological condition characterized by acute and subacute neuropsychiatric symptoms, with memory deficits and confusion as core features, often accompanied by seizures, movement disorders, or autonomic dysfunction. Early diagnosis with neuronal antibody testing is crucial due to the lack of sensitive cerebrospinal fluid markers. Additionally, some cases of LE are paraneoplastic, requiring tumor surveillance and treatment in addition to immunotherapy.
Limbic encephalitis (LE) is a rare cause of encephalitis presenting as an acute and subacute onset of neuropsychiatric manifestations, particularly with memory deficits and confusion as core features, along with seizure occurrence, movement disorders, or autonomic dysfunctions. LE is caused by neuronal antibodies targeting the cellular surface, synaptic, and intracellular antigens, which alter the synaptic transmission, especially in the limbic area. Immunologic mechanisms involve antibodies, complements, or T-cell-mediated immune responses in different degree according to different autoantibodies. Sensitive cerebrospinal fluid markers of LE are unavailable, and radiographic findings may not reveal a typical mesiotemporal involvement at neurologic presentations; therefore, a high clinical index of suspicions is pivotal, and a neuronal antibody testing is necessary to make early diagnosis. Some patients have concomitant tumors, causing paraneoplastic LE; therefore, tumor survey and treatment are required in addition to immunotherapy. In this study, a review on the molecular and immunologic aspects of LE was conducted to gain awareness of its peculiarity, which we found quite different from our knowledge on traditional psychiatric illness.

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