Neuroimmunology Group, Institute of Neuroscience and Muscle Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Dev Med Child Neurol. 2011 Jun;53(6):522-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-8749.2011.03922.x.
Systemic lupus erythematosus is a multi-organ autoimmune disorder associated with autoantibodies of complex diversity. Antiphospholipid antibodies (aPL), which are commonly associated with lupus, create a pro-thrombotic tendency, but are also associated with non-thrombotic neurological features. Movement disorders are rare neuropsychiatric complications of lupus and antiphospholipid syndrome, and autoimmune and thromboembolic disease mechanisms have been proposed.
We describe the clinical features, investigation findings, treatment, and outcome of six paediatric participants with movement disorders associated with lupus and/or aPL (six females, median age 13 y, range 8-15). To examine the autoantibody hypothesis, we used a neuronal cell line with dopaminergic characteristics and measured serum antibody binding to neuronal cell-surface antigens using flow cytometry. For comparison with the six participants, we used serum from healthy individuals (n=12, six females, median age 11 y, range 9-13) and children with other neurological diseases (n=13, seven females, median age 7 y, range 2-15).
Of the six participants, two had lupus only, two had lupus with aPL, and two had aPL only. The movement disorder was chorea in four and parkinsonism in two. All four participants with chorea had aPL and movement disorder relapses. The two participants with parkinsonism did not have aPL, but had a progressive course until rituximab or plasma exchange resulted in neuropsychiatric remission. All six participants demonstrated elevated serum antibody binding to neuronal cell-surface antigens compared with healthy individuals and those with other neurological diseases.
This report supports the association of chorea with aPL, but suggests a different autoimmune mechanism operates in lupus parkinsonism. The presence of antibody binding to neuronal cell-surface antigens supports a possible direct action of autoantibodies on neurons in patients with movement disorders associated with lupus and aPL.
系统性红斑狼疮是一种多器官自身免疫性疾病,与复杂多样的自身抗体有关。抗磷脂抗体(aPL)通常与狼疮有关,会产生促血栓倾向,但也与非血栓性神经特征有关。运动障碍是狼疮和抗磷脂综合征的罕见神经精神并发症,已经提出了自身免疫和血栓栓塞性疾病机制。
我们描述了与狼疮和/或 aPL 相关的运动障碍的 6 名儿科参与者的临床特征、检查结果、治疗和结局(6 名女性,中位年龄 13 岁,范围 8-15 岁)。为了检验自身抗体假说,我们使用具有多巴胺能特征的神经元细胞系,并用流式细胞术测量血清抗体与神经元细胞表面抗原的结合。为了与 6 名参与者进行比较,我们使用了 12 名健康个体(6 名女性,中位年龄 11 岁,范围 9-13 岁)和 13 名患有其他神经疾病的儿童(7 名女性,中位年龄 7 岁,范围 2-15 岁)的血清。
6 名参与者中,有 2 名仅有狼疮,2 名有狼疮和 aPL,2 名仅有 aPL。运动障碍为 4 名舞蹈症和 2 名帕金森病。所有 4 名患有舞蹈症的参与者均有 aPL,且运动障碍复发。2 名患有帕金森病的参与者没有 aPL,但病情进展,直到利妥昔单抗或血浆置换导致神经精神缓解。与健康个体和其他患有神经疾病的个体相比,所有 6 名参与者的血清抗体与神经元细胞表面抗原的结合均升高。
本报告支持舞蹈症与 aPL 有关,但提示狼疮帕金森病的自身免疫机制不同。抗体与神经元细胞表面抗原的结合表明,运动障碍与狼疮和 aPL 相关的患者中,自身抗体可能直接作用于神经元。