transient stroke like neurological deficits, and
behavioral problems. Hemiparesis, hemiatrophy, and
hemianopia may occur contralateral to the cortical
abnormality.
Children with SWS suffer from a variety of
neurologic abnormalities, including epilepsy, mental
retardation, and attention-deficit hyperactivity
disorder, migraine, and stroke like episodes. Seventy
five to 90% of children with SWS have epilepsy.
Focal seizures are initially observed in most children
who have SWS. Fever and infection often precipitate
seizure onset. If noncontrasted computed
tomography obtained in the emergency room setting
after seizure activity is reported as normal or reveals
focal calcification ipsilateral to a cutaneous
angioma, more complete cerebral imaging is
warranted. Most seizures are focal, because the
lesion responsible for the epilepsy in SWS is focal.
Seizures are likely caused by hypoxia and
microcirculatory stasis. Children with radiographic
findings of intracranial angiomatosis usually develop
seizures by the age of 3 years. Approximately half
these children have frank mental retardation,
whereas others display learning disabilities, attention
disorders, or behavioral disturbances.
SWS classically presents with a unilateral
cutaneous nevus PWS or red wine stains on the face.
The cutaneous presentation occurs due to early
embryonic vascular malformation. SWS may also
present with angiomas in the leptomeninges
resulting in epilepsy and hemiparesis and/or
angiomas in the eye causing glaucoma. The most
frequent oral presentation of SWS is hyperplasia of
the gingiva, affecting the maxilla, floor of the
mouth, lips, cheeks, palate and tongue of the same
side. SWS may also present with changes in the
histology and morphology of gingiva, periodontium,
and pulp. (Neerupakam, 2017)
It’s typical manifestations include, cutaneous-
port wine stain on the face, ocular-glaucoma,
choroidal hemangioma and neural features-
leptomeningeal haemangioma, seizures. Oral
involvement in SWS presents as a gingival
haemangiomatous lesion limited to the maxilla and
mandible of the same side. (Neerupakam, 2017)
SWS can be classified into three different types:
Type 1 (most common type) is characterized
by port-wine stain, cerebral malformation
(leptomeningeal angiomas), and the possibility
of glaucoma or choroidal lesions. Seizures may
occur during the first year of life.
Developmental disabilities may be seen during
the first year.
Type 2 is characterized by port-wine stain and
possibly glaucoma without cerebral
malformation (leptomeningeal angiomas).
Headaches or migraines may also occur.
Type 3 is characterized by cerebral
malformation (leptomeningeal angiomas)
exclusively. Port-wine stain is not present and
glaucoma is rare. (Hernandez, 2019)
In this case we got the patient has weakness of
right extremities, unable to use right hand for normal
activity, pain on right eye, redness on left eye
(glaucoma and buftalmos), red skin on left face
(port-wine stain), blurred vision on left eye.
Weakness on left facial nerve, vestibulocochlear
nerve, glossopharynx nerve and hipoglossus nerve.
MRI brain support to Sturge Weber Syndrome. We
give rehabilitation program to improve her quality of
life. The patient felt more comfort to walking after 2
months, and hand function is still not improving.
There was no adverse events or harm while running
this rehabilitation program.
She runs her rehabilitation program at a hospital
near her home, and every months control to Soetomo
Hospital. She didn’t do this rehabilitation program
maximally because she focused on her eye treatment
first that painful and very disturb her. Although there
was no significant increase in MMT, but she felt
more comfort in walking and not easily tired as
before.
The prognosis in SWS varies widely. Although
patients with widespread hemispheral disease or
bihemispheric disease are at greatest risk for
neurologic complications, many function virtually
normally. Clearly, a subgroup of patients with
limited central nervous system involvement as
defined by neuroimaging studies has a particularly
malignant clinical course, with intractable epilepsy,
headache, stroke like episodes, and cognitive
deterioration. There is a greater likelihood of
intellectual impairment when seizure start before the
age of 2 and are resistant to treatment. Prognosis is
worse in the minority of children who have both side
of the brain affected by the blood vessel abnormality
(NINDS, 2019).
4 CONCLUSIONS
It is important to know about the disease to know the
treatment and the obstacle for our rehabilitation
program. We give this program to the patient to help
her improve the quality of life. Although the course
of the disease will go on and cannot be cured. We