1. Clinical Reasoning: An 11-year-old girl with focal seizures, fevers, and unilateral, enhancing cortical lesions
- Author
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Ernesto Gonzalez-Giraldo, Jeffrey B. Russ, Clare M. Timbie, and Yi Li
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Fever ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Clinical Decision-Making ,Brain Edema ,Perfusion scanning ,Diagnosis, Differential ,03 medical and health sciences ,Autoimmune Diseases of the Nervous System ,0302 clinical medicine ,Seizures ,Convulsion ,medicine ,Humans ,Medical history ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Girl ,Child ,media_common ,Cerebral Cortex ,business.industry ,Electroencephalography ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Expressive aphasia ,Hemiparesis ,Encephalitis ,Female ,Myelin-Oligodendrocyte Glycoprotein ,Neurology (clinical) ,Radiology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Perfusion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
An 11-year-old girl with no relevant medical history experienced acute-onset confusion and speech arrest without loss of consciousness, eye deviation, tonic stiffening, or convulsion. At an outside emergency department, her examination included expressive aphasia, right lower facial droop, and right-sided hemiparesis. Noncontrast head CT was negative for acute intracranial pathology, CT angiogram showed patent vasculature, and CT perfusion showed no areas of perfusion mismatch. The patient was transferred to our institution for further management.
- Published
- 2020
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