Early Diagnosis of CNS Virus Infections from Neurological Autoimmune Diseases: A Cross-Sectional Study from China in ER Setting
Daiquan Gao, Xue Lv, Zuoyao Shen, Huicong Wang, Wenfeng Zhao, Huang Wang, Xiukun Jin, Liuchen Tan, Lu Yin, Junhui Wang, Weihua Yue, Hongxing Wang

TL;DR
This study identifies key symptoms and lab results that help distinguish CNS virus infections from autoimmune diseases in emergency settings.
Contribution
The study provides a diagnostic model using neuropsychiatric and lab data to differentiate CNS viral infections from autoimmune diseases.
Findings
CNS virus infections show higher rates of abnormal behavior and sensation/thought compared to autoimmune diseases.
Increased CSF white cell counts and blood bilirubin levels are linked to CNS viral infections.
The model achieved 88.0% accuracy in differentiating the two conditions.
Abstract
It is challenging to differentiate between central nervous system (CNS) virus infections and neurological autoimmune diseases in the emergency department. Considering their different pathogenesis, we assume they differ in neuropsychiatric symptoms and laboratory results. A total of 80 patients were included in this study, 50 with CNS virus infections and 30 with CNS autoimmune diseases, confirmed by a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). A binary logistic regression model and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve were employed to examine the discrimination between the two types of diseases based on neuropsychiatric symptoms and laboratory results. Compared to patients with neurological autoimmune diseases, patients with CNS virus infections had a higher incidence of abnormal behavior (p = 0.026) and abnormal sensation/thought (p = 0.029); higher total (p…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAutoimmune Neurological Disorders and Treatments · Multiple Sclerosis Research Studies · Infectious Encephalopathies and Encephalitis
