Pediatric Neurology
Volume 32, Issue 5 , Pages 295-299, May 2005

Rasmussen’s Syndrome: Progressive Autoimmune Multi-Focal Encephalopathy

  • John M. Freeman, MD

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCommunications should be addressed to: Dr. Freeman; Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions; Meyer 2-147, Johns Hopkins Hospital; Baltimore, MD 21287-7247.

Johns Hopkins Hospital, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore, Maryland.

Received 2 September 2004; accepted 13 December 2004. published online 22 March 2005.

Rasmussen’s encephalitis, originally thought to be a chronic form of viral encephalitis, is now thought to be an autoimmune disease of the brain and is more properly termed Rasmussen’s syndrome. Starting in one area of one side of the brain, the disease appears to gradually and progressively involve that side of the brain causing progressive and intractable focal seizures, a hemiparesis, and expressive aphasia when the left hemisphere is involved. Immune therapy with steroids, immunoglobulins, or plasmaphoresis provide only temporary relief from seizures. Neither antibodies to Glu-R3 nor cortical biopsy are helpful in the diagnosis. Hemispherectomy of one form or another is the only curative therapy, and there is no evidence that one form of hemispherectomy is preferable to another. Immuno-ablative therapy may be a therapy of the future.

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PII: S0887-8994(05)00026-3

doi:10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2004.12.002

Pediatric Neurology
Volume 32, Issue 5 , Pages 295-299, May 2005