“…The diagnosis is usually suspected at birth based on the facial port‐wine birthmark and then established by neuroimaging; typical SWS brain involvement on MRI includes leptomeningeal contrast enhancement, enlarged deep veins and choroid plexus, focal atrophy, and calcifications 3. The clinical course and outcome of SWS is highly variable, ranging from no or minimal neurological signs to severe impairment with uncontrolled seizures, hemiparesis, visual field cut, and learning disability 3. Cross‐sectional and longitudinal neuroimaging studies showed that some children with SWS show good neurocognitive outcome despite extensive unilateral brain involvement, presumably due to early, effective functional reorganization in the contralateral (unaffected) hemisphere 4, 5, 6.…”