Abstract

Recent psychoneuroimmunology research has provided new insight into the etiology and pathogenesis of severe mental disorders (SMDs). The mild encephalitis (ME) hypothesis was developed with the example of human Borna disease virus infection years ago and proposed, that a subgroup SMD patients, mainly from the broad schizophrenic and affective spectrum, could suffer from mild neuroinflammation, which remained undetected because hard to diagnose with available diagnostic methods. Recently, in neurology an emerging new subgroup of autoimmune encephalitis (AE) cases suffering from various neurological syndromes was described in context with the discovery of an emerging list of Central Nervous System (CNS) autoantibodies. Similarly in psychiatry, consensus criteria of autoimmune psychosis (AP) were developed for patients presenting with CNS autoantibodies together with isolated psychiatric symptoms and paraclinical findings of (mild) neuroinflammation, which in fact match also the previously proposed ME criteria. Nevertheless, identifying mild neuroinflammation in vivo in the individual SMD case remains still a major clinical challenge and the possibility that further cases of ME remain still under diagnosed appears an plausible possibility. In this paper a critical review of recent developments and remaining challenges in the research and clinical diagnosis of mild neuroinflammation in SMDs and in general and in transdisciplinary perspective to psycho-neuro-immunology and neuropsychiatry is given. Present nosological classifications of neuroinflammatory disorders are reconsidered with regard to findings from experimental and clinical research. A refined grading list of clinical states including “classical” encephalitis, AE, AP/ME,and newly proposed terms like parainflammation, stress-induced parainflammation and neuroprogression, and their respective relation to neurodegeneration is presented, which may be useful for further research on the possible causative role of mild neuroinflammation in SMDs. Beyond, an etiology-focused subclassification of ME subtypes, like autoimmune ME or infectious ME, appears to be required for differential diagnosis and individualized treatment. The present status of the clinical diagnosis of mild neuroinflammatory mechanisms involved in SMDs is outlined with the example of actual diagnosis and therapy in AP. Ideas for future research to unravel the contribution of mild neuroinflammation in the causality of SMDs and the difficulties expected to come to novel immune modulatory, anti-infectious or anti-inflammatory therapeutic principles in the sense of precision medicine are discussed.

Highlights

  • The field of psychoneuroimmunology has rapidly evolved from early findings of minor systemic alterations indicating the potential involvement of inflammation in various severe mental disorders (SMDs) to a plethora of robust findings demonstrating the rather definitive role of systemic inflammation in a relevant subgroup of SMDs [1,2,3,4,5]

  • There is clear evidence that a small subgroup of patients with SMDs can be diagnosed as AE/AP [128]

  • AP cases would fulfil the criteria of mild encephalitis (ME), as defined earlier

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The field of psychoneuroimmunology has rapidly evolved from early findings of minor systemic alterations indicating the potential involvement of inflammation in various severe mental disorders (SMDs) to a plethora of robust findings demonstrating the rather definitive role of systemic inflammation in a relevant subgroup of SMDs [1,2,3,4,5]. The limited precision and nearly unnoticed change of meaning of clinical terms over time should in addition be recognized, being apparent in the recent short history of AE diagnosis, an important example for our discussion as being closely related to AP [compare [91]]: from its initial description of AE cases suffering from “classical” limbic encephalitis as paraneoplastic disease, AE has broadened its meaning to including a larger and seemingly emerging subgroup of cases presenting with minor neurological symptoms, associated with paraclinical findings of neuroinflammation [92, 93], and even with predominant psychiatric symptoms in initial stage with the new consensus criteria [51], in other words AE representing a milder form of encephalitis previously not diagnosed as encephalitis in neurology, representing an important clinically relevant change [58].

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