Rasmussen’s Encephalitis: A Rare Cause of Intractable Seizures

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Abstract

Rasmussen’s encephalitis (RE) is a rare chronic progressive inflammatory disease of the brain that results in difficult-to-control seizures (mostly focal: epilepsia partialis continua), cognitive decline and progressive loss of neurological function including speech, motor skills with eventual paralysis of one half of the body (hemiparesis) and encephalitis. It is a disease that usually affects a single hemisphere and presents commonly at an early age. It poses a lot of challenges, both in diagnosis as well as treatment. We report a case consistent with the findings of RE in a 4.5-year male child, who presented with status epilepticus; and was diagnosed as a case of RE on clinical and radiological findings.

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Mazhar, M. B., Fatima, A., & Hamid, M. H. (2022). Rasmussen’s Encephalitis: A Rare Cause of Intractable Seizures. Journal of the College of Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan, 32(1), 108–110. https://doi.org/10.29271/jcpsp.2022.01.108

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