Key Takeaways about PANDAS & PANS: A Summary
This text provides a detailed description of PANDAS (Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorders Associated with Streptococcal Infections) and PANS (Pediatric Acute-onset Neuropsychiatric syndrome). Here’s a breakdown of the most meaningful points:
1. What are PANDAS/PANS?
* PANS is the broader category, with PANDAS being a subtype (often linked to strep infections, though not always).
* They are clinical concepts still being researched and aren’t universally accepted diagnostic categories.
* They are not simply different names for typical anxiety, OCD, or tics.
2. How are they Different from “Classic” Mental Disorders?
* sudden onset: The key difference is the way symptoms appear. PANDAS/PANS symptoms have a sudden and clearly defined start date (“on day X the child was fine…”). Classic disorders develop gradually.
* Severity & Fluctuations: Symptoms are typically severe from the beginning and can be episodic and fluctuating.
* Functional Regression: This is a critical sign. It’s the loss of previously acquired skills (writing, tying shoes, bladder control, social skills) – something not typical in primary anxiety or OCD. This distinguishes them from neurodevelopmental disorders which don’t typically appear suddenly after years of normal function.
3. The Role of Infection:
* Not the Severity, but the Timing: It’s not how sick the child was, but when the neuropsychiatric changes occur in relation to the infection.
* 1-6 Week Delay: The immune response affecting the brain usually happens 1-6 weeks after the infection has seemingly resolved.
* Infections are Common: frequent infections don’t automatically mean PANDAS/PANS. The focus is on the speed of onset and regression.
4.Diagnosis:
* Clinical, Not Test-Based: Ther’s no single test to confirm PANDAS/PANS. Diagnosis relies on a careful evaluation of the pattern of symptoms.
* Pattern Recognition: Doctors look for a specific pattern of onset, course, and associated symptoms.
* Multidisciplinary Approach: Severe cases require a team including a pediatrician,neurologist,and psychiatrist,perhaps with an immunologist.
* Targeted Investigations: Tests (inflammatory markers, MRI, EEG, psychological assessments) should be guided by symptoms, not done randomly.
5. Critically important Cautions:
* Don’t Oversimplify: PANDAS/PANS shouldn’t be automatically assumed for every case of tics, OCD, or anxiety.
* Don’t Miss It: Sudden onset shouldn’t be dismissed as just an emotional crisis.
In essence, PANDAS/PANS represent a potentially distinct set of neuropsychiatric conditions triggered by an immune response, characterized by a rapid onset, significant severity, and often, the loss of previously learned skills.
Related reading