A 21-year-old man presented with focal-onset seizures with evolution to bilateral tonic-clonic seizures, fever, and encephalopathy. In our hospital, he was diagnosed with anti-NMDAR encephalitis; this antibody was found to be positive in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CBA, IIFT, EUROIMMUN AG, Luebeck, Germany). Other causes of encephalitis were rationally excluded. During his hospital stay, he developed symptoms and signs compatible with catatonia. He was treated with high-dose methylprednisolone pulse therapy and therapeutic plasma exchange. Although he comparatively improved, days after finishing his fifth session of therapeutic plasma exchange, he developed a brief episode of opisthotonus (arc de cercle) (Figure), which resolved without any treatment. He had never had similar episodes in the past. This movement disorder is infrequently seen in contemporary clinical practice. In the 19th century, hysteria was one of the major differential diagnoses of episodic opisthotonus.11. Bogousslavsky J, ed. Hysteria: the rise of an enigma. Basel: Karger; 2014.
References
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1Bogousslavsky J, ed. Hysteria: the rise of an enigma. Basel: Karger; 2014.
Publication Dates
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Publication in this collection
June 2018
History
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Received
02 Jan 2018 -
Reviewed
23 Feb 2018 -
Accepted
17 Mar 2018