When Strep Becomes Something More: A Parent's Guide to PANDAS
Your child had strep throat — and then something changed. Here's what every parent needs to know about PANDAS.
What exactly is PANDAS?
Think of the immune system as a search-and-destroy team sent to fight strep bacteria. In children with PANDAS — Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorder Associated with Streptococcal infections — that team makes a critical mistake: it accidentally attacks healthy brain tissue instead of just the bacteria.
This "friendly fire" causes the brain to become inflamed, triggering a sudden and severe onset of OCD, tics, or restrictive eating in children before puberty. It is not a behavioral problem. It is not bad parenting. It is a medical condition with biological roots.
How can a sore throat change my child's personality?
When Group A strep bacteria enter the body, the immune system produces antibodies to fight them. In children with PANDAS, those antibodies cross-react with proteins in the brain — specifically in areas that regulate mood, movement, and behavior, like the basal ganglia.
The result: abnormal brain signaling that can look like OCD, intense anxiety, sudden mood shifts, tics, or rage. It is a cyclic pattern — symptoms flare during or after infections, then may calm, then return with the next exposure.
Common symptoms to watch for:
Did this happen "overnight"?
Often, yes — and that overnight change is one of PANDAS's most distinctive hallmarks. Parents frequently describe it as a "light switch": their child went to bed one person and woke up someone different.
That said, the initial symptoms may not appear until months after a strep infection in some children. If your child is showing signs now but had strep earlier this year, PANDAS is still worth exploring.
Keep a simple log: when did symptoms start, how suddenly, and was there any illness in the weeks before? This timeline is one of the most important pieces of evidence when speaking with a specialist.
Is this permanent?
This is the fear that keeps parents up at night — and the answer, reassuringly, is no. PANDAS is treatable. Your child is still in there. The behaviors and symptoms are a sign of a brain under physiological stress, not a permanent personality change.
With appropriate treatment — especially when caught early — many children see significant improvement and return to their baseline selves. The earlier you identify and treat it, the better the outcomes tend to be.
Is it "bad behavior" or a "medical flare"?
This is one of the most important questions a parent can ask. A child in a PANDAS flare is not being defiant — their brain is physically inflamed and sending distorted signals. Trying to discipline your way through a medical episode will not work, and it is not your child's fault.
Ask yourself: did this behavior come on suddenly, does it seem disconnected from anything that happened at school or home, and does it cycle — getting better and then worse again? Those patterns point toward something physiological, not behavioral.
Why didn't my pediatrician catch this?
PANDAS is not yet part of standard medical school curriculum, and many pediatricians simply have not been trained to recognize it. This is not a failure of your doctor — it is a gap in systemic awareness that the PANDAS community is actively working to close.
You may need to advocate strongly. Ask for a referral to a specialist familiar with PANDAS, or contact the PANDAS Network (pandasnetwork.org) for physician resources. Diagnosis typically involves:
How do we fix it?
Treatment addresses both the infection and the brain inflammation. Antibiotics to treat or prevent strep are often a first step. Anti-inflammatory medications, immunotherapy (like IVIG or plasmapheresis), and behavioral therapy — including ERP for OCD symptoms — are all part of the toolkit depending on severity.
Therapy alone is rarely enough during a flare. But therapy becomes very powerful once the biological component is being treated. Think of it this way: you wouldn't ask someone with a broken leg to just try harder to walk. You treat the break, then do the rehab.
5 practical tools for parents
Frequently asked questions
If you're navigating PANDAS or suspect your child may be affected, we're here to help.
