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1.
PurposeThe purpose of this study was to describe a series of patients with pathologically proven chronic encephalitis who had a nonprogressive course during a long follow-up, suggestive of a “benign” variant of Rasmussen's encephalitis (RE).MethodsFour patients who were referred to our Comprehensive Epilepsy Program at London Health Science Centre in London, Ontario, were diagnosed with chronic encephalitis on a pathological basis after epilepsy surgery to treat their partial-onset seizures.ResultsNone of our four cases followed the typical course of RE despite their childhood-onset seizures between ages 2 and 12 years. One was preceded by a mild head trauma and fever at onset. None had epilepsia partialis continua (EPC). Their long-term follow-up revealed a nonprogressive form of the syndrome with respect to the neurological examination, EEG, MRI, and neuropsychological findings.ConclusionThese cases extend the spectrum of childhood-onset intractable epilepsy with chronic encephalitis to include nonprogressive variants of RE. The absence of EPC may be a prognostic indicator of a nonprogressive course.  相似文献   

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3.

Background and purpose

Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) is characterized by intractable epilepsy, progressive hemiparesis, and unilateral hemispheric atrophy. The progression of the symptoms to significant neurological impairment usually occurs within months to a few years. RE causes are unknown, although evidence of an autoimmune process has been extensively described in the literature. Antiepileptic drugs are usually not effective to control seizures or cerebral atrophy; despite data supporting a beneficial effect of early immunosuppressive and immunomodulatory interventions, for intractable seizures in RE patients with advanced disease, epilepsy surgery in the form of hemispheric disconnection has been considered the treatment of choice. This work describes the clinical and electrographic analyses, as well as the post-operative evolution of patients with RE.

Materials and methods

This work includes all the patients with RE evaluated from January 1995 to January 2008 by the Ribeirão Preto Epilepsy Surgery Program (CIREP), taking variables such as gender; age at epilepsy onset; seizure semiology; seizure frequency; interictal and ictal electroencephalographic (EEG) findings; age at surgery, when done; duration of epilepsy; surgery complications; follow-up duration; anatomo-pathological findings; post-surgery seizure; language and cognitive outcome; and anti-epileptic drug treatment after surgery into account.

Results

Twenty-five patients were evaluated; thirteen were female. Mean age of epilepsy onset was 4.4?±?2.0 years. There were no differences between patients with slow and fast evolution with respect to age of epilepsy onset (p?=?0.79), age at surgery (p?=?0.24), duration of epilepsy (0.06), and follow-up (p?=?0.40). There were no correlations between the presence of bilateral EEG abnormalities or the absence of spikes and post-operative seizure outcome (p?=?0.06). Immunomodulatory therapy was tried in 12 patients (48%). Twenty-three patients underwent surgery. The mean follow-up was 63.3 months. Eleven patients had total seizure control. Twelve individuals persisted with seizures consisting of mild facial jerks (six patients), occasional hemigeneralized tonic–clonic seizures (three patients), and frequent tonic–clonic seizures (three patients). Mental and language impairment was observed in 15 and 12 patients, after surgery, respectively. Eight patients presented post-operative cognitive decline, while only two patients had cognitive improvement. Comparing pre- and post-operative language deficits, 66.7% of the 12 patients with language disturbance did not improve after surgery.

Conclusions

This retrospective study reported the clinical and electrographic analysis, as well as the evolution of 23 patients with RE. Patients were divided into two groups: fast evolution and slow evolution to hemiparesis and epilepsia partialis continua. These groups may represent different RE substrates. Fourteen patients achieved satisfactory seizure control, three patients had partial response to surgery, and five patients had maintenance of the pre-operative condition. All patients with left-side involvement presented with some language disturbance, which did not improve after surgery in 66.6% of patients. Cognitive evaluation showed that the majority of the patients did not have any significant improvement, and 38.1% had cognitive deterioration after surgery.  相似文献   

4.
Five young children developed slowly progressive hemiparesis as the initial manifestation of Rasmussen encephalitis (RE). Three have remained seizure free over an observational period of 1.3–1.9 years. In the remaining two patients, seizures occurred after 0.5 and 0.6 years respectively. We suggest that RE might be presently underdiagnosed and should be suspected in cases of new onset hemiparesis. In this series, three out of five patients showed oligoclonal bands on examination of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) which represented additional diagnostic hints towards an immune-mediated condition. According to recently published formal diagnostic criteria, evidence of progressive cerebral hemiatrophy or bioptic identification of RE-typical inflammation confirms the diagnosis in such cases. Long-term immunotherapy is recommended in order to prevent further tissue loss and functional decline.  相似文献   

5.
IntroductionTiming is one of the most important modifiable prognostic factors in the management of status epilepticus. Epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) is a status epilepticus subtype of highly variable, occasionally prolonged, duration. The aim of this study was to analyze the relationship between EPC duration and outcomes.MethodsWe performed an observational prospective study of all patients with EPC admitted to our tertiary hospital between 1 September 2017 and 1 September 2018.ResultsThe sample included 10 patients, of whom 9 were women; median age was 74 years. The most frequent aetiology was cerebrovascular disease (n = 6). EPC onset occurred outside the hospital in 5 patients, with a median time to hospital admission of 4 hours. The median time to treatment onset for all patients was 12.3 hours. The median time from treatment onset to EPC control was 30 hours; time from treatment onset to EPC control showed a strong positive correlation with TT (Spearman's rho = 0.88). Six patients presented hyperglycaemia at onset; this was positively correlated with time from treatment onset to EPC control (rho = 0.71). All 6 patients with hyperglycaemia presented a brain injury explaining the EPC episode.ConclusionsDelays were observed in different phases of EPC management, which was related to longer duration of the episode. Glycaemia was also related to episode duration, probably acting as a triggering factor rather than as the aetiology.  相似文献   

6.

Introduction  

Rasmussen's encephalitis (RE) is one of the important causes of refractory seizure. The most impressive clinical manifestation of RE is epilepsia partialis continua (EPC). Others include progressive hemiparesis and neuropsychological deterioration. Currently, the best approach to RE is hemispherectomy.  相似文献   

7.
The objectives of the present study were to describe the frequency of aggressive multiple sclerosis (aMS) as well as to compare clinical and radiological characteristics in aMS and non-aMS patients included in RelevarEM (NCT 03375177).MethodsThe eligible study population and cohort selection included adult-onset patients (≥18 years) with definite MS. AMS were defined as those reaching confirmed EDSS ≥ 6 within 5 years from symptom onset. Confirmation was achieved when a subsequent EDSS ≥ 6 was recorded at least six months later but within 5 years of the first clinical presentation. AMS and non-aMS were compared using the χ2 test for categorical and the Mann-Whitney for continuous variables at MS onset and multivariable analysis was performed using forward stepwise logistic regression with baseline characteristics at disease onset.ResultsA total of 2158 patients with MS were included: 74 aMS and 2084 non-aMS. The prevalence of aMS in our cohort was 3.4% (95%CI 2.7–4.2). AMS were more likely to be male (p = 0.003), older at MS onset (p < 0.001), have primary progressive MS (PPMS) phenotype (p = 0.03), multifocal presentation (p < 0.001), and spinal cord as well as infratentorial lesions at MRI during disease onset (p = 0.004 and p = 0.002, respectively).Conclusion3.4% of our patient population could be considered aMS. Men, patients older at symptom onset, multifocal presentation, PPMS phenotype, and spinal cord as well as brainstem lesions on MRI at clinical presentation all had higher odds of having aMS.  相似文献   

8.
BackgroundThe observation of gait abnormalities, parkinsonism and vascular lesions in elderly patients is often reported as vascular parkinsonism (VP). However the status of striatal dopamine transporter (DAT) and the effects of brain vascular lesions on motor features and levodopa responsiveness are poorly defined.MethodsWe recorded clinical features, chronic response to levodopa and vascular risk factors in a cross-sectional cohort of consecutive elderly patients with possible Parkinson's disease (PD) or VP recruited in 20 centers in Italy.ResultsWe included a total of 158 patients. Onset of motor symptoms was asymmetric in 93 (59%) and symmetric in 65 patients (41%). Symmetric motor onset was associated with greater disease severity. Chronic levodopa response was positive in 75 (47.8%) and negative in 82 patients (52.2%). A negative response to levodopa was associated with greater frequency of symmetric onset of motor symptoms, worst disease severity, absence of dyskinesia and greater number of vascular risk factors. Frontal lobe showed largest vascular load. Striatal DAT was normal in 48 (30.4%) and abnormal in 110 (69.6%) patients. Patients with normal DAT binding showed higher vascular load at MRI. Significant predictive factors of worst disease severity and negative response to levodopa were hypertension, vascular lesions in basal ganglia/periventricular regions, and normal DAT uptake.ConclusionsMultiple cerebral vascular lesions modify clinical presentation and severity in patients with parkinsonism and this is underlined by specific risk factors primarily hypertension. Striatal DAT assessment is helpful in identifying patients where therapy benefit is less likely.  相似文献   

9.
《Pediatric neurology》2014,50(6):652-654
BackgroundDiffusion abnormalities on MRI are well described after prolonged seizures. However, isolated, focal, subcortical restricted diffusion is uncommon.PatientA girl of Kurdish descent experienced focal-onset epilepsy secondary to a left thalamic infarction at age 3 years. At age 6 years, she developed status epilepticus in the context of a febrile illness.ResultsFour days after the seizure, she had neurological deterioration including involuntary posturing movements and irritability. A brain MRI revealed left hemisphere subcortical restricted diffusion, predominantly in the frontal and occipital regions. She experienced persistent right hemiparesis for 2 months after the initial seizure.ConclusionsThis presentation is reminiscent of acute encephalopathy with biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion, a syndrome thus far reported almost exclusively in Japan. This represents one of the few documented examples of acute encephalopathy with biphasic seizures and late reduced diffusion in an individual not of east Asian descent.  相似文献   

10.
MethodsThe study enrolled 215 NMOSD patients who were seropositive for the anti-AQP4 antibody from 5 referral hospitals, and retrospectively analyzed their demographic, clinical, and MRI findings. Abnormal cerebral cortex lesions on brain MRI were identified by a neuroradiologist and two neurologists using consensus.ResultsMost of the 215 enrolled patients (87%) were female. The median age at onset was 22.5 years (range: 15–36 years) and the mean follow-up duration was 123 months. Brain lesions were found in 143 of 194 patients (74%) in whom MRI was performed during follow-up. Brain lesions involving the cerebral cortex were identified in 6 of these 194 patients (3.1%). Five of the patients were female, and the six patients together had a median age of 29 years (range: 15–36 years) at the time of lesion presentation. Three of them showed leptomeningeal enhancement in the lesions. At presentation of the cortex-involving lesions, five of these patients were not being treated at the time of presentation, while the sixth was being treated with interferon-beta.ConclusionsAlthough rare, cortical involvement occurs in NMOSD and is commonly combined with leptomeningeal enhancement. We speculate that this occurs only in patients who are not treated appropriately with immunosuppressant drugs.  相似文献   

11.
Purpose: Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) leads to progressive tissue and function loss of one brain hemisphere and often intractable epilepsy. This is the first randomized prospective treatment trial in RE. Methods: Germany‐wide, patients with suspected recent‐onset RE were recruited and if eligible randomized to tacrolimus or intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIGs). A loss of motor function or hemispheric volume by ≥15% (in patients >12 years at disease onset: ≥8%) led to study exit. Untreated patients served as a historical control group. Key Findings: Over 6.3 years, 21 patients with recent‐onset RE were identified. Sixteen were randomized to tacrolimus (n = 9) or IVIG (n = 7). Immunotreated patients had a longer “survival” than the historical controls. Neither treatment was more efficacious than the other. Two tacrolimus patients experienced serious adverse events. No immunotreated but several untreated patients developed intractable epilepsy. No patient with refractory epilepsy became treatment‐responsive under immunotherapy. Significance: The countrywide incidence rate of diagnosed RE is estimated as 2.4 cases/107 people ≤ age 18/year. Treatment with tacrolimus or IVIG may slow down tissue and function loss and prevent development of intractable epilepsy. However, immunotherapy may “arrest” patients in a dilemma state of pharmacoresistant epilepsy but too good function to be offered functional hemispherectomy. These compounds may therefore contribute to the therapeutic armamentarium for RE patients without difficult‐to‐treat epilepsies.  相似文献   

12.

Purpose

Rasmussen’s encephalitis (RE) is a hemispheric inflammatory disorder resulting in progressive epilepsy, hemiparesis, and cognitive decline. Controversy surrounds the most effective timing of surgery with respect to language dominance, functional status, and seizure outcome. We describe our experience with RE to inform treatment decisions.

Methods

A retrospective chart review was performed in children diagnosed with RE from 1983 to 2012.

Results

Thirteen consecutive cases were identified: six males and seven females with a mean age of 10.6 years (range 5–18). Nine patients received immunotherapy, with transient benefit in three, treatment-associated complications in two, and no difference in their mean time to treatment (5.38 vs 6.37 years p?=?0.74) or long-term outcome. Mean follow-up was 5.6 years (range 0.58–12.25). There was no difference in outcome based on pre-operative duration of seizures. At last follow-up, 63 % of surgically treated patients achieved seizure freedom, 100 % had improved seizure control, 90 % had improved cognitive function, 36 % stopped medication, and 63 % tapered medication. Language improved in 83 % of patients with dominant disease. These findings were not associated with age at treatment. All surgical patients were ambulatory at last follow-up.

Conclusions

Hemispherotomy achieves good seizure control with cognitive improvement and ambulatory status post-operatively. Time to surgery and dominant disease were not associated with outcome, suggesting that hemispherotomy can be offered early or late, with expectations of good seizure control and functional outcome, even with dominant disease.
  相似文献   

13.
ObjectivesTo investigate the differences in clinical backgrounds, especially weekly variations of stroke occurrence, between hyper-acute ischemic stroke patients with and without regular employment (RE), as well as the impact of RE on outcome.Materials and methodsSymptomatic ischemic stroke patients with ≤4.5 h from onset to door were enrolled. First, we divided patients into the RE and non-RE group to analyze differences in clinical characteristics, especially relation between weekly variations of stroke occurrence and RE. Second, we divided the same patients into those with and without favorable outcomes (modified Rankin Scale score of 0 to 2 at 3 months from stroke onset) to analyze the impact of RE on outcomes.ResultsWe screened 1,249 consecutive symptomatic ischemic stroke patients and included 377 patients (284 [75%] males; median age, 67 years). Of these patients, 248 (66%) were included in RE group. First, RE was independently associated with occurrence of stroke on Monday in reference to Sunday or a public holiday (OR 2.562, 95% CI 1.004-6.535, p = 0.049). Second, RE (OR 2.888 95% CI 1.378-6.050, p = 0.005) was a factor independently associated with a favorable outcome.ConclusionsPatients with RE were more likely to have a hyper-acute ischemic stroke on Monday in reference to Sunday or a public holiday. However, RE before stroke onset appears to have a positive impact on outcome.  相似文献   

14.
BackgroundParkinson's disease (PD) affects 1–2% of the population over 65 years. There is evidence that the clinical features differ with age at symptom onset, but published information is scarce.MethodsWe reviewed the charts of 593 PD patients and divided them into young onset (≤49 years), middle onset (50–69 years) and late onset (≥70 years) groups. Data collected included age at symptom onset, year of onset, family history of Parkinson's disease in first and second degree relatives, predominant first symptom, first anti parkinsonian medication prescribed, frequency of levodopa-induced dyskinesia, therapy related dystonia, therapy related gastrointestinal side effects, hallucination, dementia, depression and apathy.ResultsThe middle onset was the largest group (51%), followed by the late onset (39%) and the young onset (10%) groups. Young onset patients had a more frequent family history of Parkinson's disease and a longer survival. Symptoms other than tremor were more frequent as the initial symptom of the young onset group, and the frequency of tremor as the first symptom increased with advancing age at onset. Depression was more frequent in the young onset group. The frequency of treatment related dyskinesia or dystonia decreased with advancing age at onset.ConclusionWe have identified specific clinical differences in Parkinson's disease related to the patient's age at onset and added to the existing knowledge of the variability of disease presentation. We suggest an age of onset of 49 years or less for the definition of young onset PD.  相似文献   

15.
Rasmussen's encephalitis (RE) is a rare immunomediated disorder characterized by unilateral hemispheric atrophy, drug-resistant focal epilepsy, and progressive neurological deficits. Its onset typically occurs in childhood, though it has also been reported in adult age (A-RE) with atypical clinical features. The aim of this study was to describe the electroclinical features in a group of seven patients with A-RE.We retrospectively studied seven women aged 23–43 years (mean: 32.1 years) with a diagnosis of RE according to commonly accepted diagnostic criteria. All the patients were clinically evaluated and underwent prolonged video-EEG monitoring, laboratory investigations, and high-resolution MRI follow-up.All the patients displayed an ictal electroclinical pattern whose evolution varied. We identified an early phase characterized by polymorphic ictal electroclinical manifestations (temporal semiology in five cases, frontal in one, and parietal in the remaining case) and a late phase clinically characterized by viscerosensitive phenomena followed by somatosensitive signs, experiential symptoms, and motor signs in all the cases. In the late phase, the ictal EEG pattern was characterized by monomorphic, pseudorhythmic, repetitive slow-wave theta activity over the frontal and central regions, with ipsilateral propagation and/or secondary spreading to contralateral perisylvian structures. Patients were treated with a combination of AEDs and immunotherapy (steroids and IVIg); epilepsy surgery was performed in 3 cases.Our results show that A-RE is characterized by early and late clinical- and EEG-different features which may reflect a progressive involvement of a specific “extrarolandic” network in the advanced phase of the disease and may suggest that the electroclinical expression of RE varies according to the different stages of the pathological process.  相似文献   

16.
Rasmussen encephalitis (RE) is a progressive inflammatory disorder characterized by brain hemiatrophy, unilateral focal deficits, and drug‐refractory focal epilepsy. Epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) is a hallmark of the disease. Several immunomodulatory treatments may slow but not halt the disease progression. The treatment of choice still relies on surgical hemispheric disconnection, which is burdened by heavy neurologic morbidity. More limited cortical resections, although more tolerable, are usually considered to be, at best, only transiently effective in RE. Hemispheric disconnections may be not feasible when neurologic functions are preserved and the dominant hemisphere is affected. Adult patients with a milder RE course that preserves neurologic function for a long period are particularly at risk of developing severe deficits after surgery. In this study we present the histories of two patients with adult‐onset RE who have undergone selective cortical resections to control EPC, avoiding, at the same time, the severe postsurgical deficits that may be induced by hemispheric disconnective surgery. The good result obtained on EPC has been stable over a prolonged period; however, this result was not paralleled by the stop of neurologic progression in one of the two cases. A PowerPoint slide summarizing this article is available for download in the Supporting Information section here .  相似文献   

17.

Background and purpose

The study evaluated the utility of arterial spin labeling (ASL) perfusion imaging in Rasmussen's encephalitis (RE).

Material and methods

The hospital electronic database was searched using the search words “encephalitis,” “autoimmune encephalitis” and “Rasmussen's encephalitis” for the period of 1 Jan 2015 to 31 Jan 2017. Clinically diagnosed cases of RE for which epilepsy protocol magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with perfusion imaging (ASL) performed on a 3T scanner were retrieved. The diagnosis of RE was based on Bien's criteria (Bien et al., 2005). We obtained patient's demographic details, clinical features, electrophysiological studies, and follow-up data from electronic hospital records.

Results

We included nine patients with RE of whom seven patients showed increased perfusion, and two patients decreased perfusion. Among these patients, MRI changes of gyral hyperintensity without volume loss corresponded to regional ASL hyperperfusion in six patients and ASL hypoperfusion in one patient. Two patients who showed ASL hypoperfusion had corresponding atrophy on MRI. Eight patients of RE had epilepsia partialis continua (EPC) or daily seizures, and one patient was seizure-free post-surgery. Five patients showed a concordance of ASL hyperperfusion with clinical ictal onset zone. Among the seven patients with ASL hyperperfusion, the finding was concordant (complete or partial) with the electroencephalogram (EEG) ictal onset zone in six patients and with interictal epileptiform discharges (IED) in seven patients.

Conclusion

Increased perfusion in ASL of the involved brain parenchyma in RE is a common MRI finding and may be due to either active inflammation of the brain involved or a seizure-related finding.  相似文献   

18.
Surgery for medically intractable temporal lobe epilepsy during early life   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
PURPOSE: Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) in early life is often a catastrophic disorder with pharmacoresistant seizures and secondary neurological deterioration. there is little data available regarding epilepsy surgery performed in infants and young children and no prior study has focused on tle. METHODS: We analyzed the results of temporal resection for epilepsy as the primary indication in children less than age 5 years who had at least 2 years of follow-up. RESULTS: 20 children (14 males) were identified with a mean age at surgery of 26 months and a mean age at seizure onset of 12 months. Clinical presentation was diverse. Typical psychomotor seizures (n = 4; mean age at surgery 37 months) were followed by prominent motor changes (n = 7; 30 months) and were occasionally isolated (n = 3; 23 months). Epileptic spasms were noted in six patients and were frequently associated with lateralizing features. The interictal EEG was lateralizing in 15 patients and the ictal EEG was lateralizing in 18 patients. Brain MRI provided localizing value in 16 patients, ictal SPECT was concordant in 4/8 cases. Invasive EEG was employed in six cases. At mean follow-up of 5.5 years, 65% of the children were seizure-free and 15% had >90% seizure reduction. Morbidity included infection and hydrocephalus in one case and stroke-related hemiparesis in two cases. Cortical dysplasia was identified in eight children, tumors in eight including two DNET, two ganglioglioma, and four malignant tumors. Hippocampal sclerosis was present in four cases, always as dual pathology. CONCLUSION: TLE presents in early life with varied and severe manifestations. Excisional procedures in this age group are associated with favorable seizure reduction similar to older children and in adults.  相似文献   

19.
BackgroundAcute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) is a demyelinating disorder that is usually self-limited. Recent studies have suggested ongoing neurological deficits and neurocognitive impairment in these patients. Little information on the correlation of clinical and neuroimaging markers in ADEM is available. We examined potential clinical factors (e.g., age of onset, acute symptom duration, magnetic resonance imaging [MRI] lesions) and their relation to neurocognitive and psychosocial outcomes.MethodsThis is a retrospective chart review of consecutive pediatric patients diagnosed with ADEM between 2006 and 2012. Patients were evaluated with standard neurological assessment, MRI of the brain, and neuropsychological evaluation.ResultsTwenty-three patients with ADEM with average age at neuropsychological assessment of 10.1 years (±3.50) were included. Five (22.7%) patients were impaired on three or more neurocognitive measures. Psychosocial problems were reported in 20%-40% of patients. Earlier age of onset was correlated with poorer sustained attention and psychosocial problems, whereas acute symptom duration and Expanded Disability Status Scale were not. MRI outcomes were correlated with psychosocial outcomes but not neuropsychological findings.ConclusionsOur findings suggest lingering cognitive and psychosocial deficits in children with a history of ADEM. Clinical features and MRI findings correlated more strongly with psychosocial outcomes than cognitive functioning. Further studies are needed to confirm relationships and other possible contributing factors to lingering deficits.  相似文献   

20.
ObjectiveIt may be difficult for clinicians to estimate the prognosis of pediatric acute transverse myelitis (ATM). The aim of this study was to define prognostic factors for relapsing disease and poor outcome in pediatric ATM.MethodsThis prospective cohort study included 49 children, 18 boys and 31 girls (median age 13.1 years, IQR 6.5–16.2) with a first episode of ATM. Factors associated with relapsing disease and poor outcome (Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) ≥ 4) were assessed during a median follow-up of 37 months (IQR 18–75).ResultsIn total, 14 patients (29%) experienced ≥ 1 relapse(s) and nine patients (18%) had a poor outcome. Factors at onset associated with relapsing disease included higher age (16.1 vs. 11.6 years, p = 0.002), longer time to maximum severity of symptoms (5.5 vs. 3 days, p = 0.01), lower maximum EDSS score (4.0 vs. 6.5, p = 0.003), short lesion on spinal MRI (64 vs. 21%, p = 0.006), abnormalities on brain MRI (93 vs. 44%, p = 0.002) and presence of oligoclonal bands in cerebrospinal fluid (67 vs. 14%, p = 0.004). The only factor associated with poor outcome was presence of a spinal cord lesion on MRI without cervical involvement (56 vs. 14%, p = 0.02).ConclusionPediatric ATM patients presenting with clinical, radiological and laboratory features associated with multiple sclerosis (MS) are at risk for relapsing disease. In absence of these known MS risk factors at onset of disease these patients are at low risk for relapses. Only a minority of pediatric ATM patients in this cohort have a poor outcome.  相似文献   

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