Laboratory and radiological findings • Increased
liver enzyme levels (55% cases) • Increased thyroid-stimulating hormone (55% cases) • Increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate (25% cases)
Cerebrospinal fluid findings: • Raised protein (25% cases) • Negative for 14–3–3 protein • May contain antithyroid antibodies •
Magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities consistent with encephalopathy (26% of cases) •
Single photon emission computed tomography shows focal and global hypoperfusion (75% of cases) • Cerebral
angiography is normal Thyroid hormone abnormalities are common (>80% of cases): • Subclinical hypothyroidism (35% of cases) • Overt hypothyroidism (20% of cases) • Hyperthyroidism (5% of cases) • Euthyroid on levothyroxine (10% of cases) • Euthyroid not on levothyroxine (20% of cases) Thyroid antibodies – both antithyroid
peroxidase antibodies (anti-TPO, antithyroid microsomal antibodies, anti-M) and anti
thyroglobulin antibodies (anti-Tg) – in the disease are elevated, but their levels do not correlate with the severity.
Electroencephalogram studies, while almost always abnormal (98% of cases), are usually not diagnostic. The most common findings are diffuse or generalized slowing or frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity. Prominent triphasic waves, focal slowing, epileptiform abnormalities, and photoparoxysmal and photomyogenic responses may be seen. A study from 2006 suggested the following diagnostic criteria: • Encephalopathy with cognitive impairment and at least one of the following features: • neuropsychiatric symptoms (e.g. hallucination, delusion or paranoia) • Myoclonus, generalised tonic-clonic or partial seizures • focal-neurological deficits • Elevated titres of thyroid tissue antibodies (TPO-ab or microsomal) • Euthyroidism (potentially achieved by treatment with L-T4 or L-T3) or mild hypothyroidism with TSH concentration below 20 mIU/L • No evidence for infectious, toxic, metabolic or neoplastic processes in blood, urine or CSF analyses • No serological evidence for neuronal antibodies (e.g. voltage-gated calcium channel, voltage-gated potassium channel, or other currently recognized paraneoplastic antibodies) to support another diagnosis • In imaging studies no evidence for vascular, neoplastic or structural lesions that might explain the symptoms • Complete or nearly complete remission after initiation of glucocorticoid therapy.
Definition A relapsing encephalopathy occurs in association with autoimmune (Hashimoto's or Ord's thyroiditis), with high titers of antithyroid antibodies. Clinically, the condition may present one or more symptoms. Onset is often gradual and may go unnoticed by the patient and close associates to the patients. Symptoms sometimes resolve themselves within days to weeks, leaving a patient undiagnosed. For many other patients, the condition may result in ongoing problems with a variety of manifestations, often confusing clinicians due to the diffuse nature of symptoms.
Differential diagnosis •
Alzheimer's disease •
Cerebrovascular accidents (stroke) •
Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease •
Epilepsy •
Migraine (including basilar, hemiplegic, and retinal types) • Other forms of
autoimmune encephalitis, including forms of
limbic encephalitis such as
anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis •
Schizophrenia •
Spontaneous cerebrospinal fluid leak •
Viral encephalitis •
Transient ischemic attack == Treatment ==