Anti-NMDA Receptor Encephalitis Misdiagnosed As Generalized Anxiety Disorder: A Case Report

Cureus. 2021 Dec 20;13(12):e20529. doi: 10.7759/cureus.20529. eCollection 2021 Dec.

Abstract

The autoimmune encephalitis is a rare group of neurological disorders mediated by immune mechanisms. Neuropsychiatric symptoms often occur in the early stages of the disease, so many patients seek treatment in psychiatry for the first time. If psychiatrists lack understanding and vigilance of the disease, it is very easy to be misdiagnosed as various primary psychiatric diseases, thus delaying diagnosis and treatment. Here, we report an older woman with autoimmune encephalitis. In the early stage, the patient was misdiagnosed as having generalized anxiety disorder because of obvious psychiatric symptoms, and then caused the doctor's vigilance due to rapidly declining cognitive function, autonomic nervous dysfunction, involuntary movement, and other warning symptoms. Autoimmune encephalitis was diagnosed by cerebrospinal fluid examination, and the patient was cured and discharged after a period of immunotherapy.

Keywords: anti-nmdar encephalitis; autoimmune encephalitis; generalized anxiety disorder; hashimoto’s encephalopathy; rapidly progressive dementia.

Publication types

  • Case Reports