Autoimmune encephalitis is a new category of diseases in which autoantibodies against neuronal cell surface and synaptic proteins cause a wide variety of syndromes and diseases resulting in neuropsychiatric manifestations. The spectrum of diseases, comorbidities and triggers is different between adults and children and symptoms vary according to the type of autoantibody. In children the most frequent autoimmune encephalitis is anti-NMDAR followed by a few others such as anti-MOG (myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein), anti-GABAaR, and other. In this presentation I will review the spectrum of these diseases in children, some of the underlying pathogenic mechanisms involved, and the approaches to treatment.
When?
Saturday, March 27, 2021 · 9:00 a.m.
Eastern Time (US & Canada)
Duration: 1 hour
Price
Free
Language
English
Who can attend
Everyone
Dial-in available? listen only
Not available
Learning Objectives
Clinically recognize anti-NMDA receptor and other autoimmune encephalitis
Optimally manage the initial treatment approach of anti-NMDAR encephalitis
Describe the underlying antibody-mediated pathogenic mechanisms in anti-NMDAR and other types of autoimmune encephalitis.