Results 181 to 190 of about 84,070 (218)
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Rasmussen syndrome of chronic focal encephalitis
European Journal of Paediatric Neurology, 2002Rasmussen syndrome of chronic focal encephalitis is a relatively rare disease, which presents with epilepsia partialis continua and hemiparesis in childhood. Though first described in the 1950s it still remains somewhat of an enigma. The immunological process involved in its pathogenesis is better understood now but the exact relationship to viral ...
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Rasmussen encephalitis associated with Parry–Romberg syndrome
Neurology, 2003Parry-Romberg syndrome is a rare disorder associated with unilateral facial atrophy involving skin, subcutaneous tissue, skeletal muscle, and bone. Occasionally, there is CNS involvement with epilepsy being the most common CNS manifestation. The authors report a child with Parry-Romberg syndrome with a course strongly suggestive of Rasmussen ...
J R, Shah +6 more
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Double pathology in Rasmussen's syndrome
Neurology, 1998The syndrome of chronic encephalitis with epilepsy (Rasmussen's syndrome) typically occurs in children and is characterized by the development of intractable focal seizures, progressive hemiparesis and intellectual deterioration. The etiology is unknown, and the pathological abnormalities vary from those of active disease, with numerous microglial ...
Y M, Hart +5 more
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[Neuropathology of Rasmussen syndrome].
Orvosi hetilap, 1996Rasmussen's syndrome is a devastating epileptic disorder of young subjects characterized by pharmacoresistent partial sensorimotor convulsions, hemiparesis, and intellectual decline. The morphologic correlate of Rasmussen's syndrome is a chronic focal inflammation of the cerebral cortex leading to unilateral brain atrophy.
I, Vajtai, Z, Varga
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[Rasmussen syndrome. Clinical study].
Revista medico-chirurgicala a Societatii de Medici si Naturalisti din Iasi, 2006Rasmussen's syndrome is a specific progressive disease affecting primarily one hemisphere, accompanied by intractable seizures and leading to severe neurologic and mental deficit. The authors present one child with frequent partial motor seizures and myoclonic seizures refractory to antiepileptic drug therapy who was diagnosed with epilepsia partialis ...
Georgeta, Diaconu +3 more
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Rasmussen’s Syndrome: Progressive Autoimmune Multi-Focal Encephalopathy
Pediatric Neurology, 2005Rasmussen'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 ...
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