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He can’t remember his son’s wedding. The cause? A rare autoimmune disease

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“My year of unravelling” is how a despairing Christy Morrill described the nightmarish months when his immune system hijacked his brain.

Autoimmune encephalitis attacks the organ that makes us “us”, and it can appear out of the blue.

Morrill went for a bike ride with friends along the California coast, stopping for lunch. None of them noticed anything wrong. Neither did Morrill until his wife asked how his ride had gone – he had forgotten.

Morrill would get worse before he got better. “Unhinged” and “fighting to see light”, he said delusions set in and holes in his memory grew.

Morrill walks along San Francisco Bay, where he used to give guided kayak tours before being struck by autoimmune encephalitis, in Redwood City, California. Photo: AP

Morrill walks along San Francisco Bay, where he used to give guided kayak tours before being struck by autoimmune encephalitis, in Redwood City, California. Photo: AP

Of all the ways our immune system can run amok and damage the body instead of protecting it, autoimmune encephalitis is one of the most unfathomable. Seemingly healthy people abruptly spiral into confusion, memory loss, seizures and even psychosis.

But doctors are getting better at identifying the condition as they discover more of the rogue antibodies responsible for it. Finding these in the blood or spinal fluid can aid diagnosis.

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