Abstract

Autoimmune encephalitides are a group of syndromes that may present with subacute onset of disorientation, personality changes, memory loss and most prominently seizures. Earlier reports of this entity were from patients with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis, however autoimmune etiologies have also been described in patients with non-paraneoplastic encephalitis [1]. The Alpha 3 ganglionic acetylcholine receptor autoantibody (a3-AChR Ab) mainly causes autoimmune dysautonomia that is either subacute or insidious in onset. A direct relationship betweenantibody titer and severity of dysautonomia occurs in both experimental animals and patients [2]. Most of these cases have been paraneoplastic (mainly adenocarcinomas) however a few cases have been linked to other autoimmune disorders such as systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and Sjogren’s syndrome. Patients who are seropositive for a3-AChR Ab may present with less common neurological manifestations such as peripheral neuropathies, encephalopathy and subacute neuropsychiatric presentations. This report presents a unique case of refractory new-onset status epilepticus associated with a3-AChR antibody which responded to immunotherapy.

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