pediatric neurology
Monday, July 6, 2026
MOGAD — An emerging disease: Q&A
Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease (MOGAD) is a rare neuroimmune condition that affects the brain, eyes and spine. Though it shares similarities with other diseases, it was recently classified as its own disease after information distinguishing it from other conditions was discovered.
Brenda Banwell, M.D., a pediatric neurologist and pediatrician-in-chief at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center, has studied the disease for years, and co-created the Pediatric Multiple Sclerosis, MOGAD and Neuroimmune Disorders Program. She answers common questions about the condition.
Key Points
MOGAD is a rare condition that occurs when the immune system attacks the brain, the nerves connected to the eyes and the spinal cord.
It's unclear how prevalent MOGAD is because diagnostic criteria were recently established.
Children or adults with a diagnosis of MOGAD should be referred to a neurologist with understanding of the condition.
Johns Hopkins has a team of internationally recognized leaders in pediatric neuroimmunology and an established program for treating MOGAD.
What is MOGAD?
Myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody-associated disease, more commonly called MOGAD, is a condition that affects children and adults in which the immune system attacks the brain, the nerves connected to the eyes and the spinal cord.
What are the common symptoms of MOGAD?
Vision loss is the most common symptom. A person will also have some pain during eye movement.
Spinal cord attack is another common symptom. This involves numbness, tingling or weakness in the arms and legs, depending on the level of the spinal cord involvement. If the lower part of the spinal cord is involved, patients may have difficulty passing urine and have symptoms of loss of bladder control.
Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) is the third-most common symptom. With ADEM, a person experiences confusion, often along with:
confusion, lack of awareness or, in extreme cases, coma
limb weakness
visual impairment
lack of balance while walking
What are the differences between the symptoms in MOGAD and Multiple Sclerosis (MS)?
To the best of our knowledge, MOGAD shows no symptoms before the first attack. Patients I speak with don’t have any symptoms that occur in the weeks leading up to their first attack.
MS is different. People who don’t know they have MS until their first attack will often tell me they are more tired than their friends, or that their hand went numb for a couple of days, or they couldn’t see well in one eye, but it got better over a week or two.
These observations tell me that MS starts way before the first attack, whereas MOGAD seems to start near the time of attack.
How common is MOGAD?
We don't know yet how common MOGAD is. That’s because the criteria for making a MOGAD diagnosis were published in 2023, and many clinicians around the world are just now applying them and identifying children and adults who meet them.
Also, the diagnosis of MOGAD requires the detection of antibodies or proteins in the bloodstream that target myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG). This testing has become reliably available in only about the last five years, and it's still not easily accessible in many parts of the world.
What treatment options are available for MOGAD?
The treatment of MOGAD depends on whether it is a patient’s first symptomatic event or a relapse.
First Event: This is when we treat the patient immediately when they come in with the first event of visual loss, confusion or spinal cord symptoms.
Treatment with high-dose corticosteroids typically works quickly and reduces inflammation in the brain, the optic nerves or the spinal cord.
If that's not enough, we move to other therapies, often using plasma exchange. In this therapy, we take those MOG antibodies we believe are contributing to the symptoms out of blood circulation — like a dialysis for the bloodstream.
We also use intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG), which introduces antibodies from healthy donors into the blood through IV and can help neutralize the MOG antibodies and reduce inflammation while suppressing the immune system.
In addition to that, we can also use tocilizumab or a similar medicine, which is an immunosuppressant that can be lifesaving for someone having a severe MOGAD attack.
Relapsing MOGAD: The second treatment instance is for people who experience relapsing MOGAD, and we want to prevent those relapses.
We can use IVIG, but in a monthly dose.
Sometimes, we use rituximab, an antibody therapy that blocks one particular part of the immune system that triggers the relapse.
At this point, there are no specific treatments for MOGAD that have been approved through the typical regulatory process — by the Food and Drug Administration in the United States, and by the European Medicines Agency in Europe. All therapies right now are guided by specialists that have worked as a community to provide guidelines for the treatment of MOGAD.
Will all people with MOGAD have a relapse?
Not all patients will have a relapsing form of MOGAD. Some people will have one attack, and that appears to be the entire experience they have with MOGAD.
Is MOGAD more commonly seen in children or adults?
MOGAD is probably more common in children. That might change as more adult care providers start to recognize more people with MOGAD because we now have the ability to test for the antibody and use the diagnostic criteria.
What kind of doctor should a person diagnosed with MOGAD see for care?
Anyone with a diagnosis of MOGAD should be referred to either a child or adult neurologist who understands this condition. MOGAD is rare and there are many doctors around the world who would not be familiar with its diagnosis and/or the different treatments and the strategies to manage the condition.
What is the long-term outlook for people diagnosed with MOGAD?
Most patients with MOGAD do well. I can also share that relapsing MOGAD is generally a much more serious condition than cases of one event. When you have relapsing MOGAD, you're most likely going to experience new attacks in the eye, leading to loss of vision. But with current therapies, we seem to be doing better at suppressing those attacks than we were 20 years ago.
With proper therapy, most of my patients are doing very well, but what I don't know is how they will be doing in 10 or 20 years. We’re going to need to work as a community to figure that out in this era of prompt diagnosis and available treatment.
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/health/expert-qa/mogad-q-and-a?
Sunday, July 5, 2026
Is cardiac death death?
Investigators say Vincent disappeared from his parents' view during the gathering before guests found him floating face down in a backyard swimming pool. According to a police report obtained by AZFamily, both parents later admitted to smoking marijuana during the party. The report alleges Vincent's fall into the pool went unnoticed because both parents were impaired by marijuana and/or other mind-altering substances.
After Vincent was pulled from the water, first responders transported him to Mercy Gilbert Medical Center, where a doctor pronounced him dead that evening, according to police. The case took an extraordinary turn hours later when medical personnel discovered the toddler was alive and breathing after he had already been transferred to the hospital's morgue around 7:23 p.m., according to police. Vincent was immediately airlifted to Phoenix Children's Hospital for treatment.
The police report alleges responding officers and Vincent's parents questioned whether the toddler had actually died before he was pronounced dead, saying they believed he was still showing signs of life. Hospital staff reportedly told them Vincent was exhibiting agonal breathing, an involuntary reflex that can occur near death.
According to the report, a nurse later reported detecting a pulse after the child had been pronounced dead. Detectives allege the physician who made the initial determination maintained his assessment was correct and instructed hospital staff to stop lifesaving measures despite concerns from Vincent's parents and responding officers that the toddler still appeared to be breathing. Police did not recommend criminal charges against the physician, according to AZFamily.
According to AZFamily, a Dignity Health spokesperson said the hospital conducted a review following the incident.
"This is a heartbreaking situation. We immediately conducted a thorough review of all aspects of the care that was provided to learn what happened and to make meaningful changes to strengthen our care," the spokesperson said in a statement. "Out of respect for the patient's privacy, we cannot discuss details. We continue to work with the family and their representative. Patient safety and exceptional care is our highest priority."
A GoFundMe campaign created for the family described Vincent as a "miracle baby" after he survived the ordeal.
"Vincent was declared deceased," the fundraiser says. "His devastated parents were sent home in unimaginable grief. But God had other plans. A little after 11:30 p.m., the family received a call no one expected: the medical examiner had detected a faint heartbeat."
According to the fundraiser, Vincent's kidneys, lungs and liver began shutting down after he arrived at Phoenix Children's Hospital. An MRI initially identified two small areas of potential brain damage, but later testing reportedly found no brain damage. The fundraiser says Vincent continues to require extensive therapy, ongoing medical monitoring and treatment as he recovers.
Fox News Digital has reached out to the Maricopa County Attorney's Office, Gilbert Police Department, Mercy Gilbert Medical Center and Phoenix Children's Hospital for comment.
Brittany Miller
https://www.foxnews.com/us/toddler-declared-dead-after-near-drowning-found-alive-hospital-morgue-hours-later-police-say
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Human rabies
An 11-year-old boy died of a rabies infection in Ontario, Canada, according to a medical journal article published Monday.
The Canadian Medical Association Journal did not identify the boy or his family but wrote that he was first brought to a hospital weeks after an encounter with a bat.
"The patient’s family reported that, during a visit to a cottage in northern Ontario 19 days before symptom onset, the boy had been awoken by a bat on his nose and mouth. He had swatted the bat off his face; his father had caught the bat in a cooking pot and released it outside," CMAJ wrote.
"The child had no visible lesions on his face, and his parents did not consider that the bat had behaved erratically. Therefore, they did not seek medical assessment," the journal noted.
The boy was ultimately admitted to a hospital 20 days after the encounter with the bat, when his parents brought him to an emergency room. He was first sent home but then brought back the following morning and admitted to the hospital.
Doctors noted that the boy's condition "rapidly worsened" by the evening, but he spent more than two weeks in the hospital before dying.
"By day 5 of admission, his brainstem reflexes were absent. Life-sustaining therapies were withdrawn on day 17 of admission, and he died peacefully with his family at his bedside," the journal article said.
Doctors who authored the article warned that any direct human contact with a bat, even in the absence of a visible bite or scratch, should be discussed with public health authorities.
Rabies is almost always fatal in humans if not treated quickly with postexposure prophylaxis, or PEP. The treatment is nearly always successful if administered promptly after exposure.
Anders Hagstrom
https://www.foxnews.com/world/11-year-old-dies-rabies-bat-landed-face-sleeping
Padmaja Sreeram, Neha Saini, Karen Choong, Ellery Cunan, Alan C. Jackson, Jeffrey M. Pernica
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1503/cmaj.251933
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
TMEM63B mutations; developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 118
Inspired by a patient
Vetro A, Pelorosso C, Balestrini S, Masi A, Hambleton S, Argilli E, Conti V, Giubbolini S, Barrick R, Bergant G, Writzl K, Bijlsma EK, Brunet T, Cacheiro P, Mei D, Devlin A, Hoffer MJV, Machol K, Mannaioni G, Sakamoto M, Menezes MP, Courtin T, Sherr E, Parra R, Richardson R, Roscioli T, Scala M, von Stülpnagel C, Smedley D; TMEM63B collaborators; Genomics England Research Consortium; Torella A, Tohyama J, Koichihara R, Hamada K, Ogata K, Suzuki T, Sugie A, van der Smagt JJ, van Gassen K, Valence S, Vittery E, Malone S, Kato M, Matsumoto N, Ratto GM, Guerrini R. Stretch-activated ion channel TMEM63B associates with developmental and epileptic encephalopathies and progressive neurodegeneration. Am J Hum Genet. 2023 Aug 3;110(8):1356-1376. doi: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2023.06.008. Epub 2023 Jul 7. PMID: 37421948; PMCID: PMC10432263.
Abstract
By converting physical forces into electrical signals or triggering intracellular cascades, stretch-activated ion channels allow the cell to respond to osmotic and mechanical stress. Knowledge of the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying associations of stretch-activated ion channels with human disease is limited. Here, we describe 17 unrelated individuals with severe early-onset developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE), intellectual disability, and severe motor and cortical visual impairment associated with progressive neurodegenerative brain changes carrying ten distinct heterozygous variants of TMEM63B, encoding for a highly conserved stretch-activated ion channel. The variants occurred de novo in 16/17 individuals for whom parental DNA was available and either missense, including the recurrent p.Val44Met in 7/17 individuals, or in-frame, all affecting conserved residues located in transmembrane regions of the protein. In 12 individuals, hematological abnormalities co-occurred, such as macrocytosis and hemolysis, requiring blood transfusions in some. We modeled six variants (p.Val44Met, p.Arg433His, p.Thr481Asn, p.Gly580Ser, p.Arg660Thr, and p.Phe697Leu), each affecting a distinct transmembrane domain of the channel, in transfected Neuro2a cells and demonstrated inward leak cation currents across the mutated channel even in isotonic conditions, while the response to hypo-osmotic challenge was impaired, as were the Ca2+ transients generated under hypo-osmotic stimulation. Ectopic expression of the p.Val44Met and p.Gly580Cys variants in Drosophila resulted in early death. TMEM63B-associated DEE represents a recognizable clinicopathological entity in which altered cation conductivity results in a severe neurological phenotype with progressive brain damage and early-onset epilepsy associated with hematological abnormalities in most individuals.
_______________________________________________________________
DEVELOPMENTAL AND EPILEPTIC ENCEPHALOPATHY 118; DEE118
- Nystagmus
- Tube-feeding (in some patients)
- Seizures, refractory
- Focal seizures with impaired awareness
- Tonic seizures
- Bilateral tonic-clonic seizures
- Infantile spasms
- Febrile seizures
- Myoclonic seizures
- Status epilepticus (in some patients)
- Global developmental delay, moderate to profound
- Hypotonia
- Spastic quadriparesis
- Inability to walk
- Ataxic gait
- Impaired intellectual development, moderate to profound
- Absent speech (in most patients)
- Background slowing seen on EEG
- Multifocal epileptiform discharges
- Hypsarrhythmia (in some patients)
- Delayed myelination seen on brain imaging
- White matter abnormalities
- Thin corpus callosum
- Enlarged lateral ventricles
- Dysmorphic lateral ventricles
- Cortical atrophy
- Cerebellar atrophy
- Blood transfusions (in some patients)
- Hemolysis
- Most individuals have profound developmental delay
- Progressive disorder
- De novo mutation
Monday, June 29, 2026
In case you wanted to know
AI Overview
Woody Guthrie had eight children across three marriages, and two of his children inherited and died from Huntington's disease.
The specific details regarding his children's health include:
Sue and Gwen Guthrie: Both daughters from his first marriage to Mary Jennings developed and passed away from Huntington's disease in their early forties. (A third sibling from this marriage, Bill, died in a car accident at age 23).
Arlo and Nora Guthrie: His well-known children from his second marriage to Marjorie Guthrie were born with a 50/50 chance of inheriting the disease. Both declined to be tested, but neither has developed symptoms.
Joady Guthrie: Woody’s other son with Marjorie Guthrie was tested and received a negative result.
Because Huntington's is a hereditary, autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder, Woody Guthrie's mother passed it to him, and it ultimately claimed the lives of both his oldest daughters.
Google AI
Marriage and family
At age 20, Guthrie met and married his first wife, Oklahoma-born Mary Jennings (1917–2014), in Texas in 1931. They had three children together: Gwendolyn, Sue, and Bill. Bill died at the age of 23 as the result of an automobile accident in Pomona, California. The daughters both died of Huntington's disease at the age of 41, in the 1970s. Evidently the disease had been passed on from their father, although Guthrie himself was diagnosed with the condition later in life, in 1952, when he was 43 years old. Guthrie and Mary divorced sometime between 1943 and 1945.
On November 13, 1945, Guthrie married Marjorie Greenblatt. They had four children: sons Arlo and Joady and daughters Nora and Cathy. After Guthrie was admitted to Brooklyn State Hospital in 1952, doctors advised Marjorie to divorce him and take custody of the children because of Woody's raging paranoia and occasional violent acts against family members. They were divorced in 1953. Despite the divorce, she remained close to Woody for the rest of his life and supervised all of his complex health needs.
After his discharge from the hospital, Guthrie had a romantic relationship with Anneke van Kirk from late 1952, marrying her in 1953 and having a daughter, Lorinna Lynn. However, due to his deteriorating condition, this relationship led to their divorce just one year later. Guthrie had a total of eight children over his three relationships.
Wikipedia
When you hear the sound of hoofbeats
The Spanish man, who was not named, was found to have a parasitic tapeworm larvae lodged in his brain — a case of neurocysticercosis, a parasitic infection of the central nervous system caused by the pork tapeworm (Taenia solium).
The patient, a lifelong resident of Castellón, Spain, had not traveled to any regions where the disease is endemic, according to the case report published in the CDC journal Emerging Infectious Diseases.
The man had initially come to the hospital after suffering two weeks of progressive headaches and mild behavioral changes.
CT scans showed multiple abnormal spots that looked like tumors that had spread from cancer elsewhere in the body, leading doctors to suspect advanced brain cancer.
However, whole-body scans, a colonoscopy and specialized imaging failed to identify cancer anywhere in the patient's body, the case report stated.
When doctors performed a more detailed MRI, they discovered several fluid-filled cysts in the brain, some of which contained the head of a tapeworm. A blood test confirmed the diagnosis of neurocysticercosis.
Radiologic findings from a study of autochthonous neurocysticercosis brain lesions mimicking metastatic disease. (Emerging Infectious Diseases)The man was treated with a combination of albendazole and praziquantel (two antiparasitic medications), as well as corticosteroids to reduce inflammation. He successfully recovered with no complications, according to the case report.
The authors suggested that the patient may have gotten the infection after accidentally ingesting microscopic tapeworm eggs years earlier.
The exposure may have occurred while working a construction job with migrant coworkers from regions where neurocysticercosis is endemic.
People can catch the pork tapeworm in two different ways. Eating undercooked infected pork usually leads to an intestinal tapeworm, but accidentally swallowing the parasite's eggs — typically through food or water contaminated with feces — can send the larvae into the bloodstream, where they may form cysts in the brain and other organs. This can cause the disease the patient in the case report acquired.
As this was just a single case, the source of transmission could not be proven, the researchers acknowledged, and the findings cannot be generalized to a wider population. The report shows that there is a possibility of local transmission in non-endemic settings, but cannot establish how often this occurs.
In the United States, less than 2% of neurocysticercosis cases are considered domestically acquired, according to the case report.
A prior systematic review identified only 18 confirmed locally acquired cases in Western Europe between 1990 and 2011.
In some cases, NCC can cause serious symptoms, including seizures, stroke, neurological deficits and cognitive decline.
"Our case emphasizes that the absence of travel history should not preclude NCC from the differential diagnosis of multiple ring-enhancing brain lesions, even in regions where metastatic cancer is statistically much more likely," the researchers concluded in the case study.
Detecting the worms earlier could have prevented "unnecessary invasive oncologic procedures and led to prompt, targeted antiparasitic therapy," they added.
Melissa Rudy
https://www.foxnews.com/health/doctors-thought-man-brain-cancer-found-live-tapeworms-instead
Friday, June 26, 2026
Squirmy and Grubs
"Squirmy and Grubs" is a highly popular YouTube channel run by Shane Burcaw and Hannah Aylward. The couple documents the realities of their "interabled" marriage—Shane has Spinal Muscular Atrophy, a severe muscle-wasting disease, and uses a wheelchair, while Hannah is able-bodied. Their content combines humor and education to confront misconceptions about disability, intimacy, and relationships.
About the Couple
Shane Burcaw: An award-winning author and disability advocate. He previously founded the nonprofit Laughing At My Nightmare.
Hannah Aylward: A sociology and anthropology graduate who manages the filming and editing for their vlog.
The Relationship: They began dating in 2016 and were married in September 2020. Because of societal prejudices, their interabled relationship frequently faces scrutiny, with strangers often mistaking Hannah for Shane's nurse.
Books and Advocacy Beyond vlogging,
Shane and Hannah are active public speakers and authors. They co-authored the book Interabled: True Stories About Love and Disability, which highlights the stories of multiple couples and pushes back against the ableist notion that disabled individuals cannot be equal or romantic partners.
https://www.youtube.com/c/squirmyandgrubs
We are Hannah and Shane, aka Squirmy and Grubs, and we share our love story with the world in hopes of changing the way society thinks about disability. Far too often, our relationship is perceived by others as remarkable, bizarre, tragic, and unrealistic, but these perceptions originate from a flawed—and extremely damaging—understanding of disability. If one takes the time to look a little deeper, they’ll see that our relationship is really no different than any other. Below is a short recap of our love story, and we’d love nothing more than to bring our story and message to your classroom, workplace, or event!
The Early Days
If anything is exceptionally unique about our story, it’s the unlikely circumstances that brought us together. Shane was living in Pennsylvania working as an author and a nonprofit executive in the disability sector. Hannah was living in Minnesota and studying sociology at Carleton College. One fateful night, Hannah stumbled upon a documentary that had been produced about Shane’s life. She connected with his interests and his humor, so she shot him an email to say hello. To this day, Hannah maintains that her email was a result of late-night exam-cramming delusions. Regardless, we struck up a conversation the next day, and it turned out we DID have a lot in common, from our adoration of traveling to our extreme enjoyment of trying delicious new foods.
In the weeks to follow, we became inseparable, which is ironic considering the 1000+ miles that separated us. We texted and FaceTimed constantly, and very quickly we realized there was a serious spark between us. A few months later, Hannah flew to PA for our first-ever in-person meeting, which Shane inaugurated by arriving an hour late at the airport to pick her up. His lateness did not stop her from saying “Yes” when Shane ~officially~ asked her out the next day.
Over the next two years, we trudged through a long-distance relationship that was both extraordinarily happy and distressingly hard. Thankfully, we had many visits in-person during those two years, and those trips included some unforgettable (and ridiculous) memories. During those years, Hannah learned the nuances of Shane’s daily care. More importantly, we learned that we truly enjoyed each others‘ company, and both of us wanted nothing more than to be together all the time.
The YouTube Channel
After two years of long distance, our desire to be closer became overwhelming. Shane packed up his belongings and made the move to Minneapolis, where we got an apartment together while Hannah finished her senior year of college. Hannah became Shane’s primary caregiver, which often alarms those who are new to our story. So much sacrifice! So much hardship for a young woman! Actually, those ideas can’t be farther from the truth, and one of our favorite speaking topics is how we combine caregiving with intimacy in our relationship.
A few months after moving in together, we had the silly little idea to start a YouTube channel together. We were doing some upcoming travel, and traveling with a disability is always rife with challenges, so we figured we should document it in our humorous tone. We named our channel Squirmy and Grubs, which are the (slightly embarrassing) nicknames that we gave each other early in our relationship. We never expected the channel to take off in the way that it did.
After doing a viral interview with a large YouTuber called Special Books By Special Kids, our channel quickly began to gain hundreds of thousands of followers. We started getting constant calls from talk shows wanting to feature us, national brands wanting us to represent their products, and thousands of emails each week from people connecting with our story. We were thrust into the forefront of disability activism, and although we didn’t expect it, we certainly honored the opportunity. We decided to put everything we had into improving the way society understands disability.
The Future
The rise of Squirmy and Grubs began in January 2019 and so much has happened since then. We got engaged in June of 2019 and bought a house together in November of that same year. Throughout 2019 and 2020 we performed dozens of speaking engagements all over the world, from universities with thousands of audience members to elementary schools via Zoom (thanks, COVID-19). We’ve partnered with many leading businesses to amplify diversity and inclusion in their workplaces. We were even asked to co-author a book about relationships and disability (Interabled: Love Stories - coming to a book store near you in 2022).
In everything that we do, our goal is to normalize the disability experience. We strive to educate while we entertain. Both of us bring boatloads of love and passion to our presentations, and we believe your audience will love laughing and learning with us!
Book us today!
https://www.squirmyandgrubs.com/more-about-squirmy-and-grubs

