“…There are also reports of bizarre behavior (Kyllerman et al, 1996;Morikawa et al, 1995), emotional lability, anxiety and phobia (Morikawa et al, 1995), and of autistic-like behavior (Bulteau et al, 1995;Kyllerman et al, 1996), although a case of CSWS with autistic regression is a rare occurrence: McVicar et al (2005) conducted a retrospective review of children with language regression studied at their Institute for more than 12 years, finding that only 10 children had ESES, only one of whom had a history of autism and language regression. Some works report a deterioration of language with a tendency toward expressive aphasia with lexical and syntactic difficulties, and a generally preserved comprehension (Debiais et al, 2007;MacAllister & Schaffer, 2007), learning difficulties at school, poor reasoning and short-term memory deficits (De Negri et al, 1997;Tassinari et al, 1992;, and also motor impairments, such as ataxia, dystonia and dyspraxia (Maquet et al, 1995;Tassinari et al, 2000). Roulet-Perez et al (1993) reported clinical manifestations suggestive of a poor functioning in skills correlated to executive functions.…”