Horrible to hear this news. Neurological diseases are the worst because we understand so little about them and usually there is no cure, just management.

What have your experiences been with using AI for medical advice? Especially for such rare diseases I suspect that very little shows up in the training data. Personally I'm using AI only for work and only recently started using it for non-work non-coding stuff too.

> What have your experiences been with using AI for medical advice?

I had been trying to use Gemini during my bout of encephalitis before treatment. I wasn't really trying to diagnose myself, but instead, was looking up side effects of the various (psychiatric) medications I was on. At the time, I (but not my wife) had thought all biological causes had been ruled out due to testing from my PCP. To be clear, I wasn't really in my right mind, so whether this was a reasonable belief or not (likely not) isn't something to be assumed. Like, I just thought I had GAD. Or OCD. Or something latent that had just all of a sudden started rearing its ugly head.

I found Gemini's reporting of side effects of medication to not be helpful. Especially because it led me to wonder if some of the things were "in my head" (without a doctor even needing to say it). Anyway, there was never a point at which any AI suggested anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis. That didn't really come up until I got into the hospital and had an abnormal brain MRI.

I've since switched to ChatGPT, which I find to be leagues better than Gemini personally.

This is all really hard to explain, so I apologize if this doesn't make a lot of sense.