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Hashimoto's Encephalopathy

VERSION: 1.1 CREATED: February 2, 2026 REVISED: February 2, 2026 STATUS: Approved


DIAGNOSIS: Hashimoto's Encephalopathy (SREAT)

ICD-10: E06.3 (Autoimmune thyroiditis), G93.49 (Other encephalopathy, not elsewhere classified), E03.9 (Hypothyroidism, unspecified)

CPT CODES: 86376 (anti-TPO antibody), 86800 (anti-thyroglobulin antibody), 84443 (TSH), 84436 (thyroxine, total), 84439 (free T4), 84480 (T3, total), 84481 (free T3), 89051 (CSF cell count), 84157 (CSF protein), 70553 (MRI brain with/without contrast), 95816 (EEG routine), 95819 (EEG with sleep), 95700-95720 (continuous EEG), 62270 (lumbar puncture), 96365 (IV infusion, first hour), 96366 (IV infusion, additional hour), 80053 (CMP), 85025 (CBC), 86235 (nuclear antigen antibody), 86140 (CRP), 85652 (ESR), 78816 (FDG-PET), 86225 (anti-dsDNA), 86160 (complement C3), 86161 (complement C4), 86200 (CCP/ANCA), 82784 (immunoglobulin quantitative), 86255 (antibody, fluorescent), 83519 (immunoassay), 86327 (IgG index), 70544 (MRA head), 70547 (MRA neck), 72156 (MRI C-spine w/wo), 72157 (MRI T-spine w/wo), 78607 (SPECT brain), 36224 (cerebral angiography), 36514 (plasmapheresis), 88184 (flow cytometry), 86788 (West Nile IgM), 86789 (West Nile IgG), 87529 (viral PCR), 88104 (cytology), 61140 (brain biopsy)

SYNONYMS: Hashimoto's encephalopathy, HE, steroid-responsive encephalopathy associated with autoimmune thyroiditis, SREAT, Hashimoto encephalopathy, autoimmune thyroid encephalopathy, anti-TPO encephalopathy, thyroid autoimmune encephalopathy, encephalopathy with thyroid autoantibodies, myxedema madness, nonvasculitic autoimmune inflammatory meningoencephalitis, NAIM, thyroid antibody-associated encephalopathy

SCOPE: Diagnostic workup, acute treatment, and long-term management of suspected or confirmed Hashimoto's encephalopathy (SREAT). Covers initial presentation (acute diffuse progressive type and relapsing-remitting vasculitic type), anti-TPO and anti-thyroglobulin antibody evaluation, exclusion of alternative diagnoses, first-line corticosteroid therapy, second-line immunotherapy, seizure management, psychiatric symptom management, ICU considerations for status epilepticus or decreased consciousness, thyroid hormone optimization, and relapse prevention. This is a diagnosis of exclusion requiring elevated anti-thyroid antibodies in the setting of encephalopathy after all other etiologies have been excluded. For antibody-mediated autoimmune encephalitis (anti-NMDAR, LGI1, CASPR2), use "Autoimmune Encephalitis" template. For infectious encephalitis, use "HSV Encephalitis" template. For other metabolic encephalopathies, use appropriate specific template.


PRIORITY KEY: STAT = Immediate | URGENT = Within hours | ROUTINE = Standard | EXT = Extended/atypical cases | - = Not applicable to this setting

═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════ SECTION A: ACTION ITEMS ═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════

1. LABORATORY WORKUP

1A. Essential/Core Labs

Test ED HOSP OPD ICU Rationale Target Finding
Anti-TPO antibodies (CPT 86376) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Hallmark of Hashimoto's encephalopathy; elevated in >95% of cases; titers do not correlate with severity Elevated (>200 IU/mL strongly suggestive; any elevation significant in context)
Anti-thyroglobulin antibodies (CPT 86800) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Elevated in ~70-80% of HE; may be only elevated antibody in some cases Elevated
TSH (CPT 84443) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Thyroid function assessment; patients may be euthyroid, hypothyroid, or rarely hyperthyroid Variable; 25-30% subclinically hypothyroid; many euthyroid
Free T4 (CPT 84439) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Thyroid function evaluation; rule out myxedema coma or thyrotoxicosis as cause of encephalopathy Normal or low
Free T3 (CPT 84481) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Complete thyroid function assessment Normal or low
CBC with differential (CPT 85025) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Baseline; infection screen; pre-immunotherapy assessment Normal
CMP (BMP + LFTs) (CPT 80053) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Metabolic encephalopathy screen; renal/hepatic baseline for immunotherapy; electrolytes Normal
ESR (CPT 85652) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Inflammatory/vasculitis screen; often mildly elevated in HE Normal or mildly elevated
CRP (CPT 86140) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Inflammatory marker; typically normal or mildly elevated Normal or mildly elevated
Blood glucose (CPT 82947) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Metabolic encephalopathy screen; pre-steroid baseline Normal
HbA1c (CPT 83036) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Glycemic status before high-dose steroids <5.7%
Ammonia (CPT 82140) STAT STAT - STAT Hepatic encephalopathy mimic Normal
Lactate (CPT 83605) STAT STAT - STAT Sepsis screen; metabolic screen Normal (<2.0 mmol/L)
PT/INR, aPTT (CPT 85610+85730) STAT STAT - STAT Coagulopathy screen pre-LP; DIC screen Normal
Magnesium (CPT 83735) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Seizure threshold; metabolic screen Normal
Phosphorus (CPT 84100) STAT STAT - STAT Metabolic screen Normal
Urinalysis with culture (CPT 81003+87086) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT UTI as encephalopathy trigger Negative
Blood cultures (x2 sets) (CPT 87040) STAT STAT - STAT Rule out septic encephalopathy No growth
Procalcitonin (CPT 84145) URGENT URGENT - URGENT Distinguish bacterial vs autoimmune etiology Normal (<0.1 ng/mL)
Urine drug screen (CPT 80307) STAT STAT - STAT Toxic/drug-induced encephalopathy mimic Negative
Alcohol level (CPT 80320) STAT STAT - STAT Alcohol-related encephalopathy Negative
Pregnancy test (females of childbearing age) (CPT 81025) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Eclampsia mimic; treatment planning (steroid/immunotherapy safety) As applicable
Vitamin B12 (CPT 82607) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - B12 deficiency encephalopathy mimic Normal (>300 pg/mL)
Folate (CPT 82746) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Nutritional deficiency screen Normal
Cortisol (AM) (CPT 82533) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Adrenal insufficiency; baseline before exogenous steroids Normal

1B. Autoimmune & Exclusion Panel

Test ED HOSP OPD ICU Rationale Target Finding
ANA (CPT 86235) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Lupus cerebritis screen; SLE can cause encephalopathy with thyroid antibodies Negative or low titer
Anti-dsDNA (CPT 86225) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - If ANA positive; lupus evaluation Negative
Anti-SSA/SSB (Ro/La) (CPT 86235) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Sjogren syndrome with CNS involvement Negative
Complement C3, C4 (CPT 86160+86161) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Lupus; complement-mediated disease Normal
ANCA (c-ANCA, p-ANCA) (CPT 86235+86200) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - CNS vasculitis screen Negative
ACE level (CPT 82164) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Neurosarcoidosis screen Normal
Anti-NMDAR antibody (serum AND CSF) (CPT 86255) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Rule out antibody-mediated autoimmune encephalitis (most important exclusion) Negative
Anti-LGI1 antibody (serum AND CSF) (CPT 86235) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Rule out LGI1 encephalitis (limbic encephalitis mimic) Negative
Anti-CASPR2 antibody (serum AND CSF) (CPT 86235) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Rule out CASPR2-associated encephalitis Negative
Anti-GABA-B antibody (serum AND CSF) (CPT 86255) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Rule out GABA-B encephalitis (seizure-prominent mimic) Negative
Anti-GAD65 antibody (serum AND CSF) (CPT 86255) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Rule out GAD65-associated encephalitis; stiff-person spectrum Negative or low titer
Mayo Autoimmune Evaluation - Encephalopathy (serum) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Comprehensive panel to exclude defined antibody-mediated etiologies All negative
Mayo Autoimmune Evaluation - Encephalopathy (CSF) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT CSF panel for antibody-mediated encephalitis All negative
AQP4-IgG (NMO antibody) (CPT 86255) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - NMOSD overlap if concurrent myelitis or optic neuritis Negative
Quantitative immunoglobulins (IgG, IgA, IgM) (CPT 82784+82784+82784) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Baseline before immunotherapy; IgA deficiency (IVIG contraindication) Normal
RPR/VDRL (CPT 86592) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Neurosyphilis screen Nonreactive
HIV antibody (CPT 86703) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT HIV-associated encephalopathy Negative
Lyme serology (CPT 86618) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - If endemic area; Lyme encephalopathy Negative

Note: Hashimoto's encephalopathy is a DIAGNOSIS OF EXCLUSION. All defined antibody-mediated autoimmune encephalitides (anti-NMDAR, LGI1, CASPR2, GABA-B, etc.) MUST be excluded before attributing encephalopathy to anti-TPO antibodies alone. Anti-TPO antibodies are present in ~10-13% of the general population; their presence does not prove causation. The critical diagnostic criterion is steroid responsiveness.

1C. Rare/Specialized (Refractory or Atypical)

Test ED HOSP OPD ICU Rationale Target Finding
Anti-neuronal nuclear antibody type 1 (ANNA-1/anti-Hu) (CPT 86255) - EXT EXT - Paraneoplastic encephalitis mimic Negative
Anti-neuronal nuclear antibody type 2 (ANNA-2/anti-Ri) (CPT 86255) - EXT EXT - Paraneoplastic screen Negative
Anti-CV2/CRMP5 (CPT 86235) - EXT EXT - Paraneoplastic encephalitis mimic Negative
Anti-Ma2/Ta (CPT 86255) - EXT EXT - Paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis mimic Negative
14-3-3 protein (CSF) (CPT 83519) - EXT EXT - Prion disease exclusion in rapidly progressive cases Negative
RT-QuIC (CSF) (CPT 83519) - EXT EXT - Prion disease exclusion Negative
CSF oligoclonal bands with paired serum (CPT 83916) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Intrathecal IgG synthesis; elevated in ~25% of HE May show CSF-specific bands
CSF IgG index (CPT 86327) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Intrathecal antibody synthesis May be elevated
Anti-alpha-enolase antibodies (NAE) - EXT EXT - Proposed biomarker in HE subset (attacks neuronal surface); research test Positive may support HE
CSF anti-TPO antibodies (CPT 86376) - EXT EXT - Intrathecal production of anti-TPO; not widely validated Positive may support intrathecal production
Next-generation sequencing (CSF metagenomics) (CPT 81321) - EXT EXT - Occult infection exclusion when standard testing negative No pathogens detected
Brain biopsy (last resort) (CPT 61140) - EXT - - Perivascular lymphocytic infiltration; exclusion of other pathology Lymphocytic perivascular cuffing, no vasculitis

2. DIAGNOSTIC IMAGING & STUDIES

2A. Essential/First-line

Study ED HOSP OPD ICU Timing Target Finding Contraindications
CT head without contrast (CPT 70450) STAT STAT - STAT Immediate (ED triage) Rule out mass, hemorrhage, hydrocephalus; usually normal in HE None significant
MRI brain with and without contrast (CPT 70553) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Within 24h Normal in ~50%; subcortical white matter T2/FLAIR hyperintensities; patchy enhancement; may mimic MS or vasculitis; rarely mesial temporal signal GFR <30, gadolinium allergy, pacemaker
EEG (routine or continuous) (CPT 95816) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE STAT Within 24h; continuous if ICU or altered consciousness Generalized or focal slowing (most common, ~90%); frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity (FIRDA); triphasic waves; epileptiform discharges; rarely periodic lateralized discharges None significant
ECG (12-lead) (CPT 93000) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Immediate Bradycardia (hypothyroid); QTc prolongation (medication safety) None
Chest X-ray (CPT 71046) STAT STAT - STAT Immediate Rule out pulmonary pathology; mediastinal mass Pregnancy (relative)
Thyroid ultrasound (CPT 76536) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Within 48-72h Evaluate for Hashimoto thyroiditis (heterogeneous echotexture, diffuse hypoechogenicity, nodules); goiter assessment None significant

2B. Extended

Study ED HOSP OPD ICU Timing Target Finding Contraindications
MRI brain with epilepsy protocol (CPT 70553) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - If seizures recurrent Subtle cortical lesions; hippocampal sclerosis; exclude structural cause Gadolinium contraindications
MRA head and neck (CPT 70544+70547) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Within 48-72h if vasculitis suspected Rule out CNS vasculitis; large vessel disease Gadolinium contraindications
CT chest/abdomen/pelvis with contrast (CPT 71260+74178) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Within 48-72h Occult malignancy screen (paraneoplastic mimic); thyroid pathology Contrast allergy, renal insufficiency
FDG-PET brain (CPT 78816) - EXT EXT - Within 1-2 weeks Cortical hypometabolism; differentiate from other encephalopathies Uncontrolled diabetes, pregnancy
Video-EEG monitoring (prolonged) (CPT 95711-95720) - ROUTINE ROUTINE STAT As needed Characterize seizure semiology; detect subclinical seizures; distinguish epileptic from non-epileptic events None
Cerebral angiography (conventional) (CPT 36224) - EXT - - If CNS vasculitis strongly suspected Rule out primary CNS vasculitis (beading pattern) Contrast allergy, renal insufficiency, coagulopathy

2C. Rare/Specialized

Study ED HOSP OPD ICU Timing Target Finding Contraindications
MRI spine (cervical and thoracic) with and without contrast (CPT 72156+72157) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - If myelopathic signs present Concurrent myelitis; overlap syndromes (NMOSD, MOGAD) GFR <30, gadolinium allergy
SPECT brain (CPT 78607) - EXT EXT - If PET unavailable Regional hypoperfusion; frontal or temporal abnormalities None significant
Brain biopsy (CPT 61140) - EXT - - Last resort; diagnosis uncertain despite full workup Perivascular lymphocytic infiltration without vasculitis; exclusion of other pathology Coagulopathy, inaccessible location

LUMBAR PUNCTURE (CPT 62270)

Indication: Essential for diagnosis of Hashimoto's encephalopathy; rules out infectious encephalitis; CSF abnormalities present in ~75-80% of cases (elevated protein is the most common finding); supports exclusion of defined antibody-mediated autoimmune encephalitides

Timing: STAT/URGENT -- perform as soon as safely possible after CT head; do NOT delay for MRI

Volume Required: 20-30 mL (large volume for comprehensive antibody and infectious testing)

Study ED HOSP OPD ICU Rationale Target Finding
Opening pressure URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Elevated ICP assessment 10-20 cm H2O (usually normal)
Cell count with differential (tubes 1 and 4) (CPT 89051) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Mild pleocytosis in ~25% of HE WBC usually <50 (lymphocyte-predominant); many cases normal; RBC 0
Protein (CPT 84157) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Elevated in ~75-80% of HE (most common CSF finding) Mildly to moderately elevated (typically 50-150 mg/dL)
Glucose with paired serum glucose (CPT 82945) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Low in infection; typically normal in HE Normal (>60% of serum)
Gram stain and bacterial culture (CPT 87205+87070) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Rule out bacterial meningitis No organisms
HSV 1/2 PCR (CPT 87529) STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT Rule out HSV encephalitis (critical mimic) Negative
VZV PCR (CPT 87529) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT Varicella encephalitis Negative
EBV PCR (CPT 87529) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Viral encephalitis screen Negative
Enterovirus PCR (CPT 87529) URGENT URGENT - URGENT Viral meningitis/encephalitis Negative
West Nile virus IgM/IgG (CPT 86788+86789) - ROUTINE - - Endemic areas Negative
Cryptococcal antigen (CPT 87327) URGENT ROUTINE - URGENT Immunocompromised; chronic meningitis Negative
VDRL (CSF) (CPT 86592) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Neurosyphilis Negative
Oligoclonal bands (CSF AND paired serum) (CPT 83916) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Intrathecal IgG synthesis; present in ~25% of HE May show CSF-specific bands
IgG index (CPT 86327) URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT Intrathecal antibody synthesis May be mildly elevated
Cytology (CPT 88104) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - Carcinomatous/lymphomatous meningitis exclusion Negative
Flow cytometry (CPT 88184) - ROUTINE ROUTINE - CNS lymphoma exclusion Normal
Autoimmune encephalitis antibody panel (CSF) URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT NMDAR, LGI1, CASPR2, GABA-B, AMPA, DPPX -- to EXCLUDE defined autoimmune encephalitides All negative (REQUIRED for HE diagnosis)
AFB culture and smear (CPT 87116) - ROUTINE - - TB meningitis if risk factors Negative

Special Handling: Send minimum 2 mL CSF to each reference lab. CSF anti-TPO can be sent but is not widely validated. Autoimmune encephalitis panel on CSF is MANDATORY to exclude defined antibody-mediated etiologies before diagnosing HE. Store extra CSF (frozen at -20C) for future testing. CSF protein elevation is the most common finding in HE (75-80%).

Contraindications: Elevated ICP without imaging (get CT first), coagulopathy (INR >1.5, platelets <50K), skin infection at LP site, posterior fossa mass with risk of herniation


3. TREATMENT

3A. Acute/Emergent

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Acyclovir IV (empiric until HSV ruled out) IV Encephalopathy of unknown etiology pending HSV PCR 10 mg/kg :: IV :: q8h :: 10 mg/kg IV q8h; continue until HSV PCR negative x2 (48h apart) or alternative diagnosis confirmed Renal impairment (adjust dose); adequate hydration required Renal function daily; hydration status; crystal nephropathy prevention STAT STAT - STAT
Ceftriaxone (empiric if bacterial meningitis not excluded) IV Pending CSF culture results; empiric bacterial meningitis coverage 2g :: IV :: q12h :: 2g IV q12h; continue until CSF cultures negative at 48-72h Cephalosporin allergy; severe penicillin allergy (cross-reactivity) Cultures; clinical response; CBC; renal function STAT STAT - STAT
Vancomycin (empiric if bacterial meningitis not excluded) IV Pending CSF culture results; covers resistant pneumococcus 15-20 mg/kg :: IV :: q8-12h :: 15-20 mg/kg IV q8-12h (actual body weight); target trough AUC/MIC 400-600 Vancomycin allergy; red man syndrome (infuse over >1h) Vancomycin trough or AUC; renal function daily; ototoxicity STAT STAT - STAT
Dexamethasone (empiric meningitis dose) IV Adjunctive with empiric antibiotics for suspected bacterial meningitis 0.15 mg/kg :: IV :: q6h x 4 days :: 0.15 mg/kg IV q6h x 4 days; give first dose BEFORE or WITH first antibiotic dose Active fungal infection; known viral meningitis Glucose; GI bleeding; clinical response STAT STAT - STAT
Lorazepam (acute seizure) IV Active seizure 0.1 mg/kg :: IV :: PRN :: 0.1 mg/kg IV (max 4 mg/dose); repeat x1 in 5 minutes if seizure persists Respiratory depression; acute narrow-angle glaucoma Respiratory status; sedation level; airway patency STAT STAT - STAT
Midazolam (if no IV access) IM Active seizure without IV access 10 mg :: IM :: PRN :: 10 mg IM (adults >40 kg) or 0.2 mg/kg intranasal Respiratory depression Respiratory status; sedation level; airway patency STAT STAT - STAT
Levothyroxine (if hypothyroid) IV/PO Hypothyroidism contributing to encephalopathy 1.6 mcg/kg :: PO :: daily :: 1.6 mcg/kg/day PO (adjust for age/cardiac status); IV dose is 75% of oral dose if unable to take PO Untreated adrenal insufficiency (check cortisol first); acute MI (start low) TSH, free T4 q4-6 weeks; cardiac monitoring in elderly/cardiac patients URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT

Note: Initiate empiric acyclovir and antibiotics IMMEDIATELY when infectious etiology has not been excluded. Do NOT delay antimicrobials for LP results. If clinical suspicion for HE is high based on anti-TPO elevation and exclusion workup is underway, corticosteroids can be started concurrently -- a dramatic response to steroids is both therapeutic and diagnostically supportive.

3B. First-Line Immunotherapy (Corticosteroids)

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Methylprednisolone IV (CPT 96365) IV First-line treatment; dramatic steroid response is hallmark of HE 1000 mg :: IV :: daily :: 1000 mg IV daily x 3-5 days; infuse over 1-2 hours; most patients show improvement within 24-72 hours Active untreated infection; uncontrolled diabetes; psychosis from steroids Glucose q6h (target <180); BP; mood/sleep; I/O; GI prophylaxis URGENT STAT - STAT
Omeprazole (GI prophylaxis during steroids) PO/IV GI protection during high-dose steroid therapy 40 mg :: IV :: daily :: 40 mg IV/PO daily during steroid course and taper PPI allergy None routine URGENT STAT - STAT
Insulin sliding scale SC Steroid-induced hyperglycemia Per protocol :: SC :: PRN :: Per protocol if glucose >180 mg/dL Hypoglycemia risk Glucose q6h; adjust per response URGENT STAT - STAT
Oral prednisone taper (following IV methylprednisolone) PO Maintenance after IV pulse; prevent relapse 1 mg/kg :: PO :: daily :: 1 mg/kg/day (max 60-80 mg) x 2-4 weeks; taper by 10 mg every 1-2 weeks to 20 mg; then taper by 5 mg every 1-2 weeks; total taper over 3-6 months; SLOW taper critical (relapse rate 40-50% with rapid taper) Active infection; uncontrolled diabetes; avascular necrosis Glucose; BP; bone density if prolonged; mood; weight; adrenal insufficiency on taper; relapse monitoring - STAT ROUTINE -

Note: Corticosteroids are the HALLMARK treatment of Hashimoto's encephalopathy. A dramatic response to IV methylprednisolone (often within 24-72 hours) is both therapeutically and diagnostically critical -- lack of steroid response prompts reconsideration of the diagnosis. Relapse rates are 40-50%, most commonly associated with rapid steroid taper. Prolonged slow taper (3-6 months minimum) significantly reduces relapse risk. Some patients require indefinite low-dose steroids or steroid-sparing agents.

3C. Second-Line Immunotherapy (Steroid-Sparing / Refractory)

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
IVIG (intravenous immunoglobulin) (CPT 96365) IV Steroid-refractory HE; relapsing disease; steroid contraindications 0.4 g/kg :: IV :: daily x 5 days :: 0.4 g/kg/day IV x 5 days (total 2 g/kg); infuse per weight-based protocol; premedicate with acetaminophen, diphenhydramine IgA deficiency (anaphylaxis risk); recent thromboembolic event; renal failure Renal function daily; headache (aseptic meningitis); thrombosis; volume overload; check IgA level before first dose - URGENT - URGENT
Plasmapheresis (PLEX) (CPT 36514) - Steroid-refractory; rapidly progressive encephalopathy; severe presentation 5-7 exchanges :: - :: over 10-14 days :: 5-7 exchanges over 10-14 days; 1-1.5 plasma volumes per exchange; albumin replacement Hemodynamic instability; sepsis; coagulopathy; poor vascular access BP during exchanges; electrolytes (Ca, K, Mg); coagulation (fibrinogen); line site; citrate reactions - URGENT - URGENT
Azathioprine (Imuran) PO Steroid-sparing maintenance; relapsing HE 50 mg :: PO :: daily :: Start 50 mg PO daily; increase by 50 mg every 2 weeks to target 2-3 mg/kg/day TPMT deficiency (check before starting); pregnancy (relative) TPMT genotype/activity before starting; CBC q2 weeks x 2 months, then monthly; LFTs; pancreatitis - - ROUTINE -
Mycophenolate mofetil (CellCept) PO Steroid-sparing maintenance; relapsing HE 500 mg :: PO :: BID :: Start 500 mg PO BID; increase to 1000 mg PO BID over 2-4 weeks (target 1500-3000 mg/day) Pregnancy (Category D -- teratogenic); active infection CBC q2 weeks x 3 months, then monthly; LFTs; GI symptoms; infection surveillance; pregnancy prevention - - ROUTINE -
Rituximab (CPT 96365) IV Refractory to steroids and other steroid-sparing agents; multiple relapses 375 mg/m2 :: IV :: weekly x 4 :: 375 mg/m2 IV weekly x 4 doses OR 1000 mg IV x 2 doses (day 0 and day 14); premedicate with methylprednisolone 100 mg, acetaminophen, diphenhydramine Active hepatitis B; severe active infection; live vaccines within 4 weeks Hepatitis B serology (before first dose); CBC with differential q2-4 weeks; immunoglobulin levels q3 months; CD19/CD20 B-cell counts; infusion reactions; PML surveillance - URGENT ROUTINE URGENT
Cyclophosphamide (CPT 96365) IV Severe refractory HE failing all other agents 750 mg/m2 :: IV :: monthly :: 750 mg/m2 IV monthly x 6 cycles; pre-hydrate with 1L NS; administer with MESNA (uroprotection) Pregnancy; active infection; bone marrow failure CBC weekly x 4 weeks after each cycle (nadir day 10-14); urinalysis; BMP; LFTs; fertility counseling; hemorrhagic cystitis prevention - EXT EXT EXT
Methotrexate PO Steroid-sparing alternative; relapsing HE 7.5 mg :: PO :: weekly :: Start 7.5 mg PO weekly; increase to 15-25 mg weekly over 4-8 weeks; supplement with folic acid 1 mg daily Pregnancy; hepatic disease; renal impairment; active infection; bone marrow suppression CBC monthly; LFTs monthly; renal function; pulmonary symptoms - - ROUTINE -

Note: Second-line agents are indicated for patients who are steroid-refractory (reconsider diagnosis if no steroid response at all), who relapse during steroid taper, or who have contraindications to prolonged steroids. IVIG and PLEX are used for acute flares or severe presentations. Azathioprine and mycophenolate are the most commonly used steroid-sparing maintenance agents. Rituximab is reserved for multiply-relapsing or refractory cases.

3D. Seizure Management

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Levetiracetam (first-line ASM) IV/PO Seizures associated with HE (occur in ~60-70% of cases) 1000-1500 mg :: IV :: BID :: Load: 1000-1500 mg IV; Maintenance: 500-1500 mg IV/PO BID (max 3000 mg/day) Renal impairment (adjust dose per CrCl) Behavioral changes (rage, irritability); suicidality; renal function STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT
Lacosamide (second-line ASM) IV/PO Second-line or adjunctive for focal seizures 200-400 mg :: IV :: BID :: Load: 200-400 mg IV; Maintenance: 100-200 mg IV/PO BID (max 400 mg/day) Second/third degree AV block; severe hepatic impairment ECG (PR prolongation); dizziness; cardiac monitoring during load URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT
Valproic acid IV/PO Generalized or focal seizures; dual benefit for mood stabilization 20-40 mg/kg :: IV :: divided :: Load: 20-40 mg/kg IV (max rate 6 mg/kg/min); Maintenance: 250-500 mg IV/PO q8h (target level 50-100 mcg/mL) Pregnancy (teratogenic -- Category X); hepatic disease; urea cycle disorders; mitochondrial disease (POLG) LFTs; ammonia; CBC (thrombocytopenia); drug level; pancreatitis URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT
Brivaracetam IV/PO Alternative to levetiracetam (fewer behavioral side effects) 100 mg :: IV :: BID :: Load: 100 mg IV; Maintenance: 50-100 mg IV/PO BID (max 200 mg/day) Hepatic impairment (reduce dose) Behavioral changes; sedation - URGENT ROUTINE URGENT
Clobazam PO Adjunctive for refractory seizures 5-10 mg :: PO :: BID :: Start 5-10 mg BID; titrate to 20-40 mg/day in divided doses Severe hepatic impairment; myasthenia gravis Sedation; CYP2C19 poor metabolizers (reduce dose); tolerance; dependence - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Phenytoin/fosphenytoin (acute refractory) IV Acute seizure control if first-line agents insufficient 20 mg PE/kg :: IV :: load :: Fosphenytoin: 20 mg PE/kg IV (max rate 150 mg PE/min); Maintenance: 5-7 mg/kg/day divided BID-TID (target level 10-20 mcg/mL) AV block; bradycardia Continuous cardiac monitoring during load; drug level; purple glove syndrome (peripheral IV) STAT STAT - STAT
Midazolam infusion (refractory SE) IV Refractory status epilepticus 0.2 mg/kg :: IV :: bolus then infusion :: Bolus: 0.2 mg/kg IV; Infusion: 0.1-2.0 mg/kg/hr; titrate to EEG burst suppression Unprotected airway (requires intubation) Continuous EEG; respiratory status; hemodynamics; tachyphylaxis - - - STAT
Propofol infusion (refractory SE) IV Refractory status epilepticus 1-2 mg/kg :: IV :: bolus then infusion :: Bolus: 1-2 mg/kg IV; Infusion: 20-80 mcg/kg/min (max 5 mg/kg/hr to avoid PRIS) Propofol infusion syndrome risk (prolonged use >48h at high doses); egg/soy allergy Continuous EEG; triglycerides q48h; CPK; lactate; hemodynamics; PRIS surveillance - - - STAT

Note: Seizures occur in approximately 60-70% of Hashimoto's encephalopathy patients and present as focal, generalized, or status epilepticus. Immunotherapy (corticosteroids) is the definitive seizure treatment -- ASMs control acute seizures but do not resolve the underlying autoimmune process. Many patients can be tapered off ASMs once immunotherapy achieves remission. Levetiracetam is preferred first-line given favorable drug interaction profile with immunotherapy. Status epilepticus occurs in ~10-15% and requires aggressive management.

3E. Psychiatric Symptom Management

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Haloperidol (acute agitation/psychosis) IV/IM Acute psychosis or severe agitation (psychiatric symptoms in ~35-45% of HE) 0.5-2 mg :: IV :: q4-6h PRN :: 0.5-2 mg IV/IM q4-6h PRN (lowest effective dose); max 20 mg/day QTc >500 ms; Parkinson disease; prior NMS ECG (QTc); EPS; NMS surveillance; temperature; CPK if NMS suspected STAT STAT - STAT
Quetiapine (psychosis/insomnia) PO Psychosis, agitation, sleep disruption 25-50 mg :: PO :: qHS :: Start 25-50 mg qHS; titrate to 200-400 mg/day in divided doses QTc prolongation; severe hepatic impairment QTc; metabolic parameters; orthostatic BP; sedation - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Olanzapine (agitation/psychosis) IM/PO Moderate agitation or psychosis 2.5-5 mg :: IM :: BID :: 2.5-5 mg PO/IM BID (start low); max 20 mg/day QTc prolongation; metabolic syndrome Glucose; lipids; QTc; weight; sedation; EPS - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Lorazepam (agitation/anxiety) IV/PO Acute agitation, anxiety, insomnia; catatonia features 1-2 mg :: IV :: q4-6h PRN :: 1-2 mg IV/PO q4-6h PRN; for catatonia: escalate to 8-24 mg/day as needed Respiratory compromise (high doses) Respiratory rate; sedation; airway STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT
Valproic acid (mood stabilization) PO Mood lability, agitation; dual benefit for seizure control in HE 250-500 mg :: PO :: BID :: 250-500 mg PO BID; titrate to level 50-100 mcg/mL Pregnancy (teratogenic -- Category X); hepatic disease; urea cycle disorders; mitochondrial disease (POLG) LFTs; ammonia; CBC (thrombocytopenia); drug level; pancreatitis - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Melatonin (sleep-wake disturbance) PO Sleep disruption (common in HE) 3-10 mg :: PO :: qHS :: 3-10 mg PO qHS None significant Sleep quality; no significant drug interactions - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Trazodone (insomnia) PO Persistent insomnia 25-100 mg :: PO :: qHS :: 25-100 mg PO qHS Concurrent MAOIs; QTc prolongation Orthostatic hypotension; priapism (rare); sedation - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

Note: Psychiatric symptoms (psychosis, depression, hallucinations, personality change, agitation) occur in approximately 35-45% of Hashimoto's encephalopathy. These symptoms are driven by the autoimmune process -- immunotherapy is the definitive treatment. Antipsychotics and other psychiatric medications provide symptomatic relief and are used at lowest effective doses, then tapered as immunotherapy takes effect. Standard NMS precautions apply with antipsychotic use.

3F. ICU-Specific Treatments

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Intubation and mechanical ventilation - Status epilepticus requiring anesthetic infusions; severe decreased consciousness (GCS <8); inability to protect airway RSI per protocol :: - :: - :: Avoid succinylcholine if hyperkalemia risk; maintain normocapnia; daily spontaneous breathing trials when appropriate As per standard airway management Ventilator parameters; ABG; daily SBT assessment - - - STAT
DVT prophylaxis (enoxaparin) SC Immobilized patients 40 mg :: SC :: daily :: 40 mg SC daily (adjust for renal function: 30 mg SC daily if CrCl <30) Active bleeding; HIT; severe thrombocytopenia Platelet count; anti-Xa if renal impairment; bleeding signs - STAT - STAT
Acetaminophen (antipyretic) IV/PO Fever management in ICU; central fever or status epilepticus-related hyperthermia 1g :: IV :: q6h PRN :: 1g IV/PO q6h PRN (max 4g/day); use as part of targeted temperature management (36-37C) Severe hepatic impairment; weight <50 kg (reduce dose) Hepatic function; temperature response - ROUTINE - STAT
Cooling measures (non-pharmacologic) - Central fever or status epilepticus-related hyperthermia refractory to antipyretics - :: - :: - :: Cooling blankets, ice packs, surface cooling devices; target temperature 36-37C Avoid overcooling; coagulopathy risk with hypothermia Continuous temperature monitoring; shivering assessment (Bedside Shivering Assessment Scale) - - - STAT
Labetalol IV (hypertensive emergency in encephalopathy) IV Hypertensive crisis associated with encephalopathy 10-20 mg :: IV :: q10-15min PRN :: 10-20 mg IV q10-15min PRN; or infusion 0.5-2 mg/min; target SBP <180 Severe bradycardia; AV block; decompensated CHF; asthma Continuous BP; HR; I/O - - - STAT
Dexmedetomidine (agitation in ICU) IV ICU agitation requiring sedation 1 mcg/kg :: IV :: over 10 min :: Load: 1 mcg/kg IV over 10 min (optional); Infusion: 0.2-0.7 mcg/kg/hr (max 1.5 mcg/kg/hr) Severe bradycardia; advanced heart block HR (bradycardia); BP (hypotension); sedation level (RASS) - - - STAT
Famotidine (stress ulcer prophylaxis) IV ICU admission with steroid use 20 mg :: IV :: q12h :: 20 mg IV q12h GFR <50 (reduce dose) GI bleeding signs - - - STAT

Note: ICU admission is required for status epilepticus (~10-15% of HE), severe decreased consciousness, or myxedema coma overlap. Unlike anti-NMDAR encephalitis, prolonged autonomic instability is uncommon in HE. ICU course is typically shorter if corticosteroids are initiated promptly. Continue aggressive immunotherapy during ICU stay.

3G. Long-Term Maintenance & Relapse Prevention

Treatment Route Indication Dosing Contraindications Monitoring ED HOSP OPD ICU
Oral prednisone (low-dose maintenance) PO Relapse prevention; some patients require long-term low-dose steroids 5-10 mg :: PO :: daily :: 5-10 mg PO daily; aim to taper off if on steroid-sparing agent; some patients require indefinite low-dose Poorly controlled diabetes; active infection; avascular necrosis Glucose; BP; bone density (DEXA if >3 months); weight; mood; cataracts; adrenal assessment on taper - - ROUTINE -
Azathioprine (maintenance) PO Steroid-sparing maintenance; relapse prevention 2-3 mg/kg :: PO :: daily :: 2-3 mg/kg/day (target established during initial titration) TPMT deficiency; pregnancy CBC monthly; LFTs q3 months; infection surveillance - - ROUTINE -
Mycophenolate mofetil (maintenance) PO Steroid-sparing maintenance; relapse prevention 1000 mg :: PO :: BID :: 1000 mg PO BID (established dose) Pregnancy; active infection CBC monthly; LFTs q3 months; GI symptoms; pregnancy prevention - - ROUTINE -
Levothyroxine (thyroid optimization) PO Maintain euthyroid state; hypothyroidism present in 25-30% 1.6 mcg/kg :: PO :: daily :: 1.6 mcg/kg/day PO; adjust to keep TSH 0.5-2.5 mIU/L Adrenal insufficiency (correct first); acute cardiac disease TSH, free T4 q4-6 weeks until stable, then q3-6 months - - ROUTINE -
Calcium + Vitamin D (bone protection with steroids) PO All patients on steroids >3 months 1000-1200 mg/day :: PO :: daily :: Calcium 1000-1200 mg/day + Vitamin D 1000-2000 IU/day Hypercalcemia; kidney stones 25-OH Vitamin D level; calcium; DEXA baseline if anticipated steroid use >3 months - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
IVIG (maintenance) IV Multiply-relapsing HE; steroid-dependent 0.4 g/kg :: IV :: monthly :: 0.4 g/kg IV every 4 weeks (adjust per response) IgA deficiency; thromboembolic history Renal function; headache; IgG trough levels; infusion reactions - - ROUTINE -

Note: Relapse rate in Hashimoto's encephalopathy is approximately 40-50%, making long-term management critical. Most relapses occur during steroid taper, particularly if tapered too rapidly. Steroid-sparing agents (azathioprine, mycophenolate) are indicated for patients requiring prolonged steroids or experiencing relapses. Thyroid hormone optimization is important but does NOT treat the encephalopathy itself -- immunotherapy is required regardless of thyroid status. Duration of maintenance therapy is individualized; some patients achieve lasting remission after 1-2 years while others require indefinite treatment.


4. OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS

4A. Referrals & Consults

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD ICU
Neurology (autoimmune/neuroimmunology) -- all suspected HE cases; immunotherapy management; differential diagnosis; diagnosis of exclusion requires expert assessment STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT
Endocrinology -- thyroid function optimization; Hashimoto thyroiditis management; steroid-induced diabetes management URGENT ROUTINE ROUTINE URGENT
Epilepsy/EEG service -- seizure management; continuous EEG monitoring; EEG pattern interpretation STAT STAT ROUTINE STAT
Psychiatry -- psychiatric manifestations (psychosis, depression, personality change); medication management URGENT URGENT ROUTINE URGENT
Critical care/ICU -- status epilepticus; severe decreased consciousness; need for mechanical ventilation URGENT URGENT - -
Rheumatology -- if concurrent systemic autoimmune disease suspected (SLE, Sjogren, vasculitis) - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Hematology/apheresis -- PLEX coordination if steroid-refractory - URGENT - URGENT
Physical therapy -- motor rehabilitation; gait training; fall prevention; deconditioning - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Occupational therapy -- ADL assessment; cognitive rehabilitation; adaptive strategies - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Speech-language pathology -- swallowing evaluation if decreased consciousness; cognitive-linguistic therapy - ROUTINE ROUTINE ROUTINE
Neuropsychology -- formal cognitive assessment; rehabilitation planning; serial monitoring of cognitive recovery - - ROUTINE -
Social work -- family support; insurance navigation; disability resources; long-term care planning - ROUTINE ROUTINE -
Rehabilitation medicine -- comprehensive inpatient or outpatient rehab program if significant functional deficits - ROUTINE ROUTINE -

4B. Patient/Family Instructions

Recommendation ED HOSP OPD
Return to ED immediately for new seizures, sudden confusion, behavioral changes, fever, difficulty breathing, or loss of consciousness Y Y Y
Hashimoto's encephalopathy is a treatable condition -- most patients improve dramatically with steroids; recovery takes weeks to months Y Y Y
Do NOT drive until seizure-free for state-mandated period AND cleared by neurology Y Y Y
Keep seizure diary (date, time, type, duration, triggers) if seizures have occurred - Y Y
Do NOT stop steroid medications abruptly -- abrupt discontinuation causes adrenal crisis and disease relapse - Y Y
Report any signs of infection (fever >100.4F, cough, dysuria, rash) immediately while on immunotherapy - Y Y
Avoid live vaccines while on immunosuppressive therapy (inform all physicians of immunosuppression status) - Y Y
Steroid side effects to monitor: weight gain, mood changes, insomnia, elevated blood sugar, bone thinning -- report if severe - Y Y
This condition relapses in 40-50% of patients -- follow-up appointments are critical for monitoring and adjusting treatment - Y Y
Avoid alcohol (lowers seizure threshold, interacts with medications, worsens encephalopathy) - Y Y
Discuss pregnancy with neurology and OB/GYN before conception (some immunotherapy medications are teratogenic) - Y Y
Cognitive difficulties (memory, attention, processing speed) are common and often improve gradually with treatment - Y Y
Take thyroid medication at same time daily, on empty stomach, separated from calcium and iron by 4 hours - Y Y
Obtain medical alert bracelet (encephalopathy, seizure risk, immunosuppressed, steroid-dependent) - Y Y
Bring all medications to every appointment; do not add over-the-counter medications without consulting neurology - Y Y

4C. Hashimoto's Encephalopathy Subtypes & Clinical Patterns

Subtype Clinical Features EEG Pattern MRI Pattern Prognosis
Diffuse progressive (Type 1) Acute/subacute cognitive decline; dementia-like presentation; confusion; somnolence progressing to coma Diffuse slowing (theta-delta); FIRDA; triphasic waves Often normal; diffuse white matter changes possible Generally good with steroids; more cognitive sequelae possible
Relapsing-remitting (Type 2) Episodic stroke-like events; focal deficits; seizures; fluctuating course; mimics TIA/stroke Focal slowing; epileptiform discharges; lateralized abnormalities Focal T2/FLAIR signal changes; stroke-like lesions possible Good with steroids but higher relapse rate; requires longer maintenance
Seizure-predominant Status epilepticus or recurrent seizures as primary presentation; minimal other symptoms possible Epileptiform discharges; electrographic seizures; FIRDA possible Normal or periictal changes Excellent if seizures controlled with steroids + ASMs
Psychiatric-predominant Psychosis, depression, personality change, hallucinations as primary features; frequently misdiagnosed as primary psychiatric Diffuse slowing; usually non-epileptiform Often normal Good with steroids; psychiatric symptoms resolve as immunotherapy takes effect

Note: These subtypes are not mutually exclusive -- patients have features of multiple patterns. The relapsing-remitting subtype has the highest relapse rate and most commonly requires long-term steroid-sparing immunotherapy. All subtypes show dramatic improvement with corticosteroid treatment -- failure to respond to steroids prompts diagnostic reconsideration.


═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════ SECTION B: REFERENCE (Expand as Needed) ═══════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════

5. DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

Alternative Diagnosis Key Distinguishing Features Tests to Differentiate
Autoimmune encephalitis (anti-NMDAR, LGI1, CASPR2, GABA-B) Specific antibody-mediated syndromes with defined clinical phenotypes; specific antibodies positive Cell-based assay antibody panels (serum AND CSF); CSF NMDAR is most sensitive
HSV encephalitis Acute fever, temporal lobe hemorrhagic necrosis, CSF pleocytosis with RBCs HSV PCR (CSF); MRI temporal lobe changes; more acute onset
Other viral encephalitis (EBV, CMV, HHV-6, enterovirus) Fever, CSF pleocytosis, specific exposure/season Specific viral PCR/serology
Bacterial meningitis/encephalitis Acute fever, meningismus, CSF neutrophilic pleocytosis, low glucose CSF Gram stain, culture, procalcitonin
Prion disease (CJD) Rapidly progressive dementia, myoclonus, akinetic mutism; cortical ribboning on MRI (DWI) 14-3-3 protein; RT-QuIC; MRI DWI cortical ribboning; EEG periodic discharges
CNS vasculitis (PACNS) Headache, stroke-like episodes, multifocal infarcts, elevated ESR/CRP Angiography; brain/leptomeningeal biopsy; ESR/CRP; vessel wall imaging
Neurosarcoidosis Cranial neuropathies, hypothalamic dysfunction, leptomeningeal enhancement ACE level; chest CT (hilar adenopathy); biopsy
CNS lymphoma Progressive encephalopathy, mass lesion, periventricular enhancement CSF cytology/flow cytometry; FDG-PET; brain biopsy
Metabolic encephalopathy (hepatic, uremic, thyroid) Metabolic derangement identified; resolves with correction CMP; LFTs; ammonia; TSH; correct underlying metabolic cause
Myxedema coma Severe hypothyroidism; hypothermia; bradycardia; obtundation; very low T4/elevated TSH TSH markedly elevated; free T4 very low; responds to thyroid hormone replacement (HE does NOT)
Neurosyphilis Cognitive decline, psychiatric symptoms, Argyll Robertson pupils RPR/VDRL; CSF VDRL; FTA-ABS
Drug/toxin-induced encephalopathy Temporal correlation with drug exposure; resolves with discontinuation Urine drug screen; medication review; drug levels
Psychiatric disorder (new-onset psychosis, depression) No CSF abnormalities; normal MRI/EEG; isolated psychiatric symptoms LP mandatory to differentiate; EEG; MRI; anti-TPO alone insufficient
ADEM (acute disseminated encephalomyelitis) Post-infectious/post-vaccination; multifocal large white matter lesions MRI pattern; MOG-IgG; monophasic course
Seizure-related encephalopathy (post-ictal/NCSE) Prolonged post-ictal confusion; non-convulsive status on EEG Continuous EEG monitoring; resolves with ASM treatment
Cerebral venous thrombosis Headache, seizures, focal deficits; venous sinus thrombosis on imaging MRV or CT venogram; D-dimer

6. MONITORING PARAMETERS

6A. Acute Phase Monitoring (Inpatient)

Parameter Frequency Target/Threshold Action if Abnormal ED HOSP OPD ICU
Neurologic examination (GCS, orientation, cognition, motor, reflexes) Q4-6h (ICU); Q8-12h (floor) Improvement expected within 24-72h of steroids If no improvement by day 3-5: reassess diagnosis; escalate to IVIG/PLEX STAT STAT - STAT
Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) Baseline, then weekly Improvement over days to weeks Document trajectory; guide treatment decisions STAT ROUTINE - STAT
Blood glucose Q6h during IV steroids <180 mg/dL Insulin sliding scale; endocrine consult if persistent >250 STAT STAT - STAT
Blood pressure Q1h (ICU); Q4h (floor) SBP 100-180 mmHg; MAP >65 Antihypertensive if >180; fluid resuscitation if hypotensive STAT STAT - STAT
Heart rate Q4h; continuous in ICU HR 60-100 Evaluate for hypothyroid bradycardia; treat arrhythmia STAT STAT - STAT
Temperature Q4h; continuous in ICU 36.0-37.5 C Fever workup (infection vs central); antipyretics STAT STAT - STAT
Seizure log Continuous Decreasing frequency/severity If increasing: escalate ASMs; ensure adequate immunotherapy; continuous EEG STAT STAT - STAT
EEG (continuous if ICU) 24-72h minimum; longer if seizures Improving background; no subclinical seizures; resolving FIRDA/triphasic waves If persistent seizures: escalate per Section 3D - URGENT - STAT
TSH, free T4 Baseline; repeat if thyroid replacement started TSH 0.5-2.5; normal free T4 Adjust levothyroxine dose; endocrinology input STAT ROUTINE - STAT
Anti-TPO titer Baseline (treatment monitoring -- do not recheck acutely) Document baseline level Titers do NOT reliably correlate with disease activity; clinical response is primary guide STAT ROUTINE - STAT
Renal function (BUN/Cr) Daily during IVIG; q48h otherwise Stable Hold IVIG if Cr rising; hydration - ROUTINE - STAT
CBC with differential Q48h during immunotherapy WBC >3.0; ANC >1.5; Plt >100 Hold immunotherapy if critically low - ROUTINE - STAT
LFTs Q48-72h during acute treatment ALT/AST <3x ULN Dose adjustment or hold hepatotoxic medications - ROUTINE - STAT
I/O and daily weight Daily Euvolemic Adjust fluids - ROUTINE - STAT

6B. Outpatient/Long-Term Monitoring

Parameter Frequency Target/Threshold Action if Abnormal ED HOSP OPD ICU
Neurologic examination (cognition, behavior, seizures, motor) Monthly x 6 months; then q3 months x 2 years; then q6 months Sustained improvement; no new symptoms If relapse: repeat MRI/EEG; pulse steroids; escalate maintenance immunotherapy - - ROUTINE -
Modified Rankin Scale (mRS) Each visit Improving toward mRS 0-1 Document trajectory; adjust treatment if plateau or decline - - ROUTINE -
TSH, free T4 Q4-6 weeks until stable; then q3-6 months TSH 0.5-2.5 mIU/L; normal free T4 Adjust levothyroxine; hypothyroidism worsens over time - - ROUTINE -
Anti-TPO antibodies q6-12 months (trend only; NOT a treatment target) Stable or declining (NOT reliable surrogate for disease activity) Do NOT escalate therapy based on titer alone; use clinical status as guide - - ROUTINE -
MRI brain with and without contrast 3-6 months post-treatment; then annually x 2 years Stable or resolved signal changes New/worsening lesions: relapse workup; pulse steroids; re-evaluate diagnosis - - ROUTINE -
EEG (routine) 3-6 months post-treatment; as needed for seizure management Improved background; no epileptiform activity If persistent abnormality: continue ASMs; assess immunotherapy adequacy - - ROUTINE -
CBC with differential Q2-4 weeks on azathioprine/mycophenolate; then monthly x 3 months; then q3 months WBC >3.0; ANC >1.5; Plt >100 Hold/reduce immunosuppression - - ROUTINE -
LFTs Monthly x 3 months on azathioprine/mycophenolate; then q3 months ALT/AST <3x ULN Dose reduction or switch agent - - ROUTINE -
Blood glucose/HbA1c Monthly during steroid taper; q3 months on maintenance HbA1c <6.5%; fasting glucose <126 Steroid-induced diabetes management; endocrinology - - ROUTINE -
Immunoglobulin levels (IgG, IgA, IgM) Q3-6 months if on rituximab IgG >400 mg/dL Immunoglobulin replacement if recurrent infections with hypogammaglobulinemia - - ROUTINE -
TPMT activity/genotype Once before starting azathioprine Normal enzyme activity Dose reduce or avoid azathioprine if intermediate/low TPMT - - ROUTINE -
DEXA scan (bone density) Baseline if steroids >3 months; repeat q1-2 years T-score >-2.5 Bisphosphonate therapy; calcium/vitamin D optimization - - ROUTINE -
ASM drug levels (if applicable) Per drug-specific schedule; after dose changes Therapeutic range Adjust dose; assess adherence - - ROUTINE -
Neuropsychological testing Baseline (when able); 6 months; 12 months Improving cognitive domains Guide cognitive rehabilitation; inform return to work planning - - ROUTINE -
Adrenal function assessment During steroid taper (especially if >3 months of steroids) Normal cortisol response Slow taper; stress-dose steroids if adrenal insufficiency - - ROUTINE -
Ophthalmologic examination Annually if on prolonged steroids No cataracts; normal IOP Ophthalmology referral if abnormal - - ROUTINE -

7. DISPOSITION CRITERIA

Disposition Criteria
Discharge home Significant improvement on steroids; no active seizures for >24h; able to perform basic ADLs; tolerating oral medications (steroids, ASMs, levothyroxine); reliable follow-up within 1-2 weeks; family/caregiver education completed; no active psychiatric safety concerns
Admit to floor (medical/neurology) New-onset encephalopathy requiring workup and immunotherapy initiation; seizures requiring medication adjustment; moderate behavioral symptoms manageable on floor; needs IV methylprednisolone pulse therapy; diagnostic uncertainty requiring expedited workup
Admit to ICU Status epilepticus; severe decreased consciousness (GCS <12); need for continuous EEG monitoring; requirement for mechanical ventilation; concurrent myxedema coma; severe psychiatric agitation with safety risk
Transfer to higher level of care PLEX or continuous EEG not available; neurology/neuroimmunology specialist not available; diagnosis uncertain and requires specialized evaluation
Inpatient rehabilitation Medically stable; significant cognitive or functional deficits requiring intensive therapy; unable to safely return home; expected to benefit from structured rehabilitation program
Skilled nursing facility Stable but unable to perform ADLs independently; requires ongoing nursing care; chronic cognitive disability
Outpatient follow-up All discharged patients: neurology follow-up within 1-2 weeks; endocrinology for thyroid management; neuropsychology referral if cognitive deficits; steroid taper monitoring; relapse surveillance
Readmission criteria New seizures after period of control; cognitive or behavioral regression; symptoms recurring during steroid taper (relapse); fever or signs of infection on immunotherapy; suspected relapse (any new neurologic or psychiatric symptoms)

8. EVIDENCE & REFERENCES

Recommendation Evidence Level Source
Hashimoto's encephalopathy as steroid-responsive encephalopathy (SREAT) Class IV, Expert Consensus Castillo P et al. Arch Neurol 2006;63:197-202
Anti-TPO antibodies in >95% of HE cases; diagnosis of exclusion Class IV, Case Series Ferracci F et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2004;75:1083-1086
SREAT terminology preferred; relationship to thyroid autoimmunity uncertain Expert Consensus Graus F et al. Lancet Neurol 2016;15:391-404
Two clinical subtypes: diffuse progressive (type 1) and relapsing-remitting (type 2) Class IV, Case Series Kothbauer-Margreiter I et al. J Neurol 1996;243:585-593
CSF protein elevation in 75-80%; pleocytosis in ~25% Class IV, Systematic Review Chong JY et al. Arch Neurol 2003;60:164-171
EEG abnormalities in ~90% (generalized slowing, FIRDA, triphasic waves) Class IV, Case Series Chong JY et al. Arch Neurol 2003;60:164-171
Seizures in ~60-70% of HE; status epilepticus in ~10-15% Class IV, Systematic Review Laurent C et al. Medicine 2016;95:e4075
Dramatic steroid response (improvement within days) Class IV, Case Series Brain L et al. Lancet 1966;2:512-514
High-dose IV methylprednisolone as first-line treatment Class IV, Expert Consensus Castillo P et al. Arch Neurol 2006;63:197-202
Relapse rate ~40-50%; associated with rapid steroid taper Class IV, Case Series Olmez I et al. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 2013;25:13-19
IVIG effective in steroid-refractory cases Class IV, Case Reports Jacob S & Bhatt M. J Neurol 2009;256:2005-2007
Plasmapheresis for acute refractory HE Class IV, Case Reports Boers PM & Colebatch JG. Clin Neurol Neurosurg 2001;103:199-201
Azathioprine and mycophenolate as steroid-sparing agents Class IV, Case Series Ferracci F et al. Thyroid 2006;16:37-42
Rituximab for refractory HE Class IV, Case Reports Olmez I et al. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 2013;25:13-19
Anti-TPO titers do not correlate with disease severity or activity Class IV Chong JY et al. Arch Neurol 2003;60:164-171
Anti-TPO antibodies found in 10-13% of general population (low specificity) Class II, Epidemiologic Hollowell JG et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2002;87:489-499
Patients may be euthyroid, hypothyroid, or hyperthyroid at presentation Class IV, Systematic Review Laurent C et al. Medicine 2016;95:e4075
MRI normal in ~50%; subcortical white matter changes in others Class IV, Case Series Chong JY et al. Arch Neurol 2003;60:164-171
MRI patchy enhancement or stroke-like lesions in type 2 Class IV Kothbauer-Margreiter I et al. J Neurol 1996;243:585-593
CSF oligoclonal bands present in ~25% of HE Class IV Ferracci F et al. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2004;75:1083-1086
Anti-NAE (alpha-enolase) antibodies as proposed biomarker Class IV, Research Fujii A et al. J Neuroimmunol 2005;162:130-136
Female predominance (4:1 female-to-male ratio) Class IV, Systematic Review Laurent C et al. Medicine 2016;95:e4075
Mean age of onset 45-55 years; range 9-86 years Class IV, Systematic Review Chong JY et al. Arch Neurol 2003;60:164-171
Levetiracetam as preferred ASM in autoimmune encephalopathy Expert Consensus Britton J. Handb Clin Neurol 2016;133:219-245
Cognitive outcomes: majority improve but ~25% have persistent deficits Class IV Castillo P et al. Arch Neurol 2006;63:197-202
Importance of excluding defined autoimmune encephalitides before HE diagnosis Expert Consensus Graus F et al. Lancet Neurol 2016;15:391-404
Original description of Hashimoto's encephalopathy Class IV, Case Report Brain L et al. Lancet 1966;2:512-514
Long-term immunosuppression for relapsing HE Class IV, Expert Practice Olmez I et al. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 2013
Thyroid hormone replacement does not treat the encephalopathy Class IV Chong JY et al. Arch Neurol 2003
Psychiatric symptoms in 35-45% (psychosis, depression, hallucinations) Class IV, Systematic Review Laurent C et al. Medicine 2016;95:e4075

CLINICAL DECISION SUPPORT NOTES

Diagnostic Criteria for Hashimoto's Encephalopathy (Consensus)

All of the following must be met: - [ ] Encephalopathy (acute or subacute onset of cognitive decline, altered consciousness, seizures, or psychiatric symptoms) - [ ] Elevated anti-TPO antibodies (>200 IU/mL strongly suggestive; any elevation in context) and/or anti-thyroglobulin antibodies - [ ] Reasonable exclusion of ALL other causes including: infectious encephalitis, defined antibody-mediated autoimmune encephalitis (NMDAR, LGI1, CASPR2, etc.), metabolic encephalopathy, toxic exposure, CNS vasculitis, prion disease, malignancy, psychiatric disorder - [ ] Dramatic response to corticosteroid therapy (supports diagnosis; lack of response prompts reconsideration) - [ ] CSF excludes infection and does not suggest alternative diagnosis

Red Flags for Hashimoto's Encephalopathy

  • Subacute encephalopathy + markedly elevated anti-TPO (>200 IU/mL) + euthyroid or mildly hypothyroid
  • Fluctuating encephalopathy with EEG showing diffuse slowing or FIRDA/triphasic waves
  • Stroke-like episodes in a patient with elevated thyroid antibodies (relapsing-remitting type)
  • Seizures or status epilepticus in a patient with known Hashimoto thyroiditis
  • Rapidly progressive cognitive decline with elevated anti-TPO and all other workup negative
  • Encephalopathy that dramatically improves with IV steroids (diagnostic and therapeutic)
  • Psychiatric presentation (psychosis, personality change) with elevated thyroid antibodies and abnormal EEG
  • Recurrent encephalopathy episodes correlating with steroid taper
  • Encephalopathy in a female patient aged 40-60 with history of autoimmune thyroid disease
  • "Treatment-resistant psychiatric illness" with elevated anti-TPO -- reassess as HE

Key Diagnostic Pitfalls

  1. Do NOT diagnose HE based on anti-TPO alone -- anti-TPO is present in 10-13% of the general population; elevated titers are necessary but not sufficient
  2. MUST exclude defined autoimmune encephalitides -- anti-NMDAR, LGI1, CASPR2, GABA-B antibody testing is mandatory before attributing encephalopathy to anti-TPO
  3. Thyroid status does NOT determine diagnosis -- patients are euthyroid (most common), hypothyroid, or hyperthyroid
  4. Anti-TPO titers do NOT correlate with severity -- do not use titer levels to guide treatment escalation or tapering decisions
  5. Steroid response is diagnostically critical -- failure to improve with adequate steroid trial (5 days of IV pulse + oral taper) prompts diagnostic re-evaluation
  6. Differentiate from myxedema coma -- myxedema responds to thyroid hormone; HE responds to steroids (not thyroid hormone alone)

CHANGE LOG

v1.1 (February 2, 2026) - Checker/rebuilder pipeline revision (all findings approved) - C1: Added venue columns (ED/HOSP/OPD/ICU) to Section 6A and 6B monitoring tables - C2: Section 4A reformatted from 6 columns to 5 columns (Recommendation | ED | HOSP | OPD | ICU); merged indication text into Recommendation column - C3: Added ICU column to Lumbar Puncture table with appropriate priorities - M1: Section 3A -- Split "Empiric antibiotics" into 3 individual rows: ceftriaxone, vancomycin, dexamethasone (meningitis dose) - M2: Section 3F -- Split "Temperature management" into separate rows: acetaminophen (antipyretic) and cooling measures (non-pharmacologic) - R1: Replaced hedging language throughout ("consider" -> directives, "may" -> definitive, "should" -> directives) for checkpoint-ready usability - R5: Corrected phenytoin/fosphenytoin dosing frequency field from "-" to "load" for structured format compliance - Updated version to 1.1; added REVISED date; updated STATUS line - Pre-rebuild score: 52/60 (87%); post-rebuild target: 57/60 (95%)

v1.0 (February 2, 2026) - Initial template creation - Section 1: 25 core labs (1A), 19 autoimmune/exclusion panel tests (1B), 12 rare/specialized tests (1C) - Section 2: 6 essential imaging/studies (2A), 6 extended (2B), 3 rare (2C), 18 LP/CSF studies - Section 3: Expanded to 7 subsections: - 3A: 5 acute/emergent treatments (empiric acyclovir, antibiotics, benzodiazepines, levothyroxine) - 3B: 4 first-line immunotherapy (methylprednisolone pulse, GI prophylaxis, insulin, oral prednisone taper) - 3C: 7 second-line immunotherapy agents (IVIG, PLEX, azathioprine, mycophenolate, rituximab, cyclophosphamide, methotrexate) - 3D: 8 anti-seizure medications including refractory status epilepticus protocols - 3E: 7 psychiatric symptom management agents - 3F: 6 ICU-specific treatments - 3G: 6 long-term maintenance/relapse prevention agents - Section 4: 12 referrals (4A), 15 patient/family instructions (4B), 4 clinical subtypes table (4C) - Section 5: 16 differential diagnoses with distinguishing features - Section 6: 14 acute monitoring parameters (6A), 16 outpatient/long-term monitoring parameters (6B) - Section 7: 8 disposition criteria - Section 8: 30 evidence references with evidence levels - Clinical Decision Support Notes: Diagnostic criteria checklist, 10 red flags, 6 key diagnostic pitfalls - Focus on SREAT concept, diagnosis of exclusion, dramatic steroid response, relapsing course, EEG patterns


APPENDIX A: Hashimoto's Encephalopathy vs Myxedema Coma

Feature Hashimoto's Encephalopathy (SREAT) Myxedema Coma
Thyroid status Euthyroid (most common), mildly hypothyroid, or rarely hyperthyroid Severely hypothyroid (very low T4, very high TSH)
Anti-TPO antibodies Elevated (required for diagnosis) May or may not be elevated
Key treatment High-dose IV corticosteroids IV levothyroxine + IV hydrocortisone
Response to thyroid hormone alone Does NOT treat encephalopathy Primary treatment
Response to steroids Dramatic improvement within days Steroids given empirically (adrenal insufficiency concern) but not primary treatment
Temperature Usually normal Hypothermia characteristic
Heart rate Usually normal Bradycardia characteristic
Reflexes Variable Delayed relaxation phase (hung-up reflexes)
CSF protein Elevated in 75-80% May be mildly elevated
EEG Diffuse slowing, FIRDA, triphasic waves, epileptiform Diffuse slowing; low voltage
Prognosis Excellent with steroids; relapse common High mortality (30-60%) even with treatment

APPENDIX B: EEG Patterns in Hashimoto's Encephalopathy

EEG Pattern Frequency in HE Clinical Significance
Generalized slowing (theta-delta) ~90% Most common finding; nonspecific but consistent with encephalopathy
Frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity (FIRDA) ~20-30% Suggests diffuse cortical dysfunction; seen in metabolic encephalopathies
Triphasic waves ~10-15% Classically associated with metabolic encephalopathy; reported in HE; differentiate from hepatic/uremic causes
Epileptiform discharges (focal or generalized) ~20-30% Indicates seizure risk; correlates with seizure-predominant subtype
Focal slowing ~15-25% Seen in relapsing-remitting (type 2) subtype; correlates with focal MRI lesions
Periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges (PLEDs/LPDs) ~5% Rare; exclude HSV encephalitis, stroke, or other structural cause
Normal EEG ~10% Does not exclude HE; clinical presentation and anti-TPO levels guide diagnosis

APPENDIX C: Anti-TPO Titer Interpretation

Anti-TPO Level Interpretation Action
Negative (<35 IU/mL) HE very unlikely (excludes >95% of cases) Strongly pursue alternative diagnoses
Mildly elevated (35-100 IU/mL) Present in ~5-10% of general population; low specificity for HE HE possible but diagnosis requires strong clinical evidence and exclusion of all alternatives
Moderately elevated (100-200 IU/mL) Increased specificity for autoimmune thyroid disease Supportive of HE diagnosis in appropriate clinical context after thorough exclusion workup
Markedly elevated (>200 IU/mL) Strongly supportive in clinical context High suspicion for HE if clinical features present and alternatives excluded; initiate steroid trial
Very high (>1000 IU/mL) Highly suggestive in appropriate clinical context Very supportive but still requires exclusion workup; titers do NOT correlate with severity

Note: No anti-TPO cutoff value is diagnostic of HE. The diagnosis rests on the combination of encephalopathy + elevated anti-TPO + exclusion of alternatives + steroid responsiveness. Anti-TPO titers are NOT used to guide treatment escalation or tapering.