Although subacute ascending paralysis without sensory involvement is typically evocative of Guillain-Barré syndrome, it can alternatively be due to infection or inflammation of the spinal cord. We describe a 16-month-old female who presented with ascending flaccid paresis after an upper respiratory tract infection. She then developed signs of upper motor neuron involvement of the lower limbs associated with upper motor neuron involvement of the upper limbs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIsolated status epilepticus or severe hypoglycemia rarely causes irreversible focal neurologic deficits in children. We describe three children who presented with status epilepticus and prolonged hypoglycemia resulting in hemiplegia due to unilateral hemispheric damage. The non-vascular cortical topography of the lesions is consistent with selective neuronal necrosis, confirmed by histopathology in one patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn spastic diplegia impaired postural control jeopardizes the organization of whole-body movements. We studied segmental motor patterns involved in standing up from a supine position in ten children with spastic diplegia associated with periventricular leukomalacia and 14 unimpaired children using a visual analysis scale previously devised for developmental research. This approach examines specific movement patterns in upper limbs, axis and lower limbs.
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