Sub-acute sclerosing pan encephalitis: A clinical appraisal.

Thursday, 5th of November 2015 Print

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Su- acute sclerosing pan encephalitis (SSPE) is a rare chronic progressive encephalitis affecting primarily children and young adults caused by a persistent infection of immune resistant measles virus. The aim of the present study is to describe the clinical profile and natural history of patients with SSPE.

METHODS

We collected data of patients with SSPE during 2004-2010 who fulfilled Dykens criteria. We analyzed demographical clinical electrophysiological and imaging features.

RESULTS

Study included 34 patients 26 (76.5%) males with age of onset from 3 to 31 years. Twenty one patients were below 15 years of age formed childhood SSPE and 13 above 15 years of age constituted adult onset group. 85.3% had low-socioeconomic status. Eleven received measles vaccination and seven were unvaccinated. 59.9% patients had measles history. Most common presenting symptom was scholastic backwardness (52.5%) followed by seizures (23.5%). Three patients each had cortical blindness macular degeneration decreased visual acuity and optic atrophy. Electroencephalographic (EEG) showed long interval periodic complexes and cerebrospinal fluid anti-measles antibody was positive in all. Magnetic resonance imaging was done in 70.5% with was abnormal in 52.5%. Mean incubation period of SSPE after measles was 9.6 years. The follow-up duration was 1-10 years (average of 2 years). Only one patient died from available data of follow-up 9 were stable and 10 deteriorated in the form of progression of staging.

CONCLUSION

SSPE is common in low-socioeconomic status. The profile of adult onset did not differ from childhood onset SSPE except for a longer interval between measles infection and presence of the ophthalmic symptom as presenting feature in adult onset group.

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