Abstract
We treated 19 patients with Rasmussen's syndrome (chronic encephalitis and epilepsy)–a rare progressive disorder of unknown etiology causing focal epilepsy, hemiparesis, and intellectual deterioration–with intravenous immunoglobulins, high-dose steroids, or both, to control seizures and improve the end point of the disease. Ten of 17 patients receiving steroids, and eight of nine patients receiving immunoglobulins, had some reduction of seizure frequency in the short term. Improvement in hemiparesiswas slight. The effect of these drugs in ameliorating the end point of the disease in thelong term remains unknown, and further multicenter studies with standardized protocols are warranted. © 1994 American Academy of Neurology.
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CITATION STYLE
Hart, Y. M., Cortez, M., Andermann, F., Hwang, P., Fish, D. R., Dulac, O., … Caraballo, R. (1994). Medical treatment of rasmussen’s syndrome (chronic encephalitis and epilepsy: Effect of high)dose steroids or immunoglobulins in 19 patients. Neurology, 44(6), 1030–1036. https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.44.6.1030
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