A 9-year-old boy, recently immigrated from a measles-endemic region, presented with acute confusion, behavioral changes, ataxia, and myoclonic seizures. Neurologic examination showed lethargy, delayed responses, right Babinski sign, and right lower-extremity weakness. Routine labs, metabolic and infectious panels, and brain/spine MRI/MRA were unremarkable. CSF revealed mild pleocytosis and elevated IgG index. Broad infectious, demyelinating, and autoimmune testing—including evaluation for autoimmune encephalitis—was negative. Immunization records were unavailable, though the family reported routine vaccinations. With a working diagnosis of seronegative autoimmune encephalitis, corticosteroids, IVIG, and plasmapheresis were administered with minimal improvement. By hospital day 12, he demonstrated only minimal withdrawal to pain. Repeat EEG showed generalized background slowing with periodic discharges every 3–5 seconds, suggestive of SSPE. On hospital day 20, CSF measles IgG titers obtained early in admission returned markedly elevated (>300 AU/mL), confirming SSPE. Immunotherapy was discontinued, and multidisciplinary teams provided supportive and palliative care planning.