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1.
PURPOSE: Lamotrigine (LTG) is recognised as effective add-on therapy for focal epilepsies, but this is the first double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study in treatment-resistant generalised epilepsy. METHODS: The study consisted of 2 x 8-week treatment periods followed by a 4-week washout period. Patients received doses of either 75 or 150 mg daily, depending on their concomitant antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). Long-term continuation was offered at the end of the study with open-label LTG. RESULTS: Five centres in Australia recruited 26 patients who were having absence, myoclonic, or generalized tonic-clonic seizures or a combination of these. Twenty-two patients completed the study. There was a significant reduction in frequency of both tonic-clonic and absence seizure types with LTG. A 350% decrease in seizures was observed for tonic-clonic seizures in 50% of cases and for absence seizures in 33% of evaluable cases. Rash was the only adverse effect causing discontinuation. Twenty-three of 26 opted for open-label LTG, with 20 still receiving LTG for a mean of 26 months. In these 20, 80% had > or =50% seizure reduction and five (25%) were seizure free. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that LTG is effective add-on therapy in patients with refractory generalised epilepsies. Statistically significant reduction in seizures in both absence and tonic-clonic seizure types was seen even with low doses of LTG.  相似文献   

2.
Since 1987, we have diagnosed 10 patients, 4 males and 6 females, aged 2-11 years at the last evaluation, who all met the following criteria of severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (SMEI): generalized or unilateral long-lasting febrile clonic seizures in the first year of life; the subsequent appearance of myoclonic seizures and other types of seizure (partial seizures, atypical absences and convulsive status epilepticus); and neuropsychological deterioration for a certain period. Family histories of epilepsy and febrile seizures could be traced in 1 and 3 cases, respectively. None of them had previous personal history of brain insult. Electroencephalographic (EEGic) recordings in febrile seizure stage were normal; and continuous prophylaxis with phenobarbital failed to prevent the recurrence of febrile seizures. EEG studies in myoclonic stage showed generalized spike-and-waves, polyspike-and-waves, focal abnormalities and/or photosensitivity. The seizures were highly resistant to antiepileptic drugs. Our experiences suggested that comedication of valproic acid, clonazepam and carbamazepine may be most effective in treatment of the diverse seizures including myoclonic seizures, myoclonic-tonic-clonic seizures, atypical absences and partial seizures. Myoclonic seizures and atypical absences diminished in parallel to a clear-cut decrease in generalized abnormalities on EEG in 4 cases aged more than 7 years. However, the partial seizures, secondarily generalized seizures and status epilepticus were still present. Further investigations should aim to identify the underlying etiology and to search more effective treatment.  相似文献   

3.
CONCLUSION: We conclude that despite inevitable variability the clinical picture of JME is characteristic. It is easy to diagnose JME if one thinks of it while the history should be thoroughly analyzed. An EEG recording during sleep confirms the diagnosis. An early diagnosis of JME permits adequate prognosis of the subsequent course of epilepsy, and adequate therapy brings remission in most of the patients. If treatment starts following the large number of severe GTC seizures, the response to therapy is incomplete. The persistency of the illness throughout the life, the need for continuous medication and therapeutic unresponsiveness in cases with late diagnosis, do not justify the increasing misconception that JME is of benign nature. Diagnosis of JME is rare because of insufficient familiarily of physicians with the illness. BACKGROUND: Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is an idiopathic generalized epileptic syndrome characterized with the combination of myoclonic, generalized tonic-clonic (GTC) and absence seizures that are readily provoked by sleep deprivation. PATIENTS: Forty-three patients, aged from 14 to 51 years, participated in a 5-year follow-up study. Diagnosis was made according to the criteria (Table 1) for diagnosis of JME set by Panayiotopoulos et al. (1994). Nineteen patients made their first contact with a neurologist at the Institute of Neurology and were diagnosed as JME, while the remaining 24 were referred to from other medical institutions with a diagnosis of therapy resistant to focal epilepsy. All patients underwent a somatic and neurological examination, "mini mental test," EEG in waking and CT scan of the brain. Some patients had EEG performed during sleep and some had MRI of the head. RESULTS: JME began between 9 and 26 (average 17) years. All patients had myoclonic seizures, 98% had GTC and 23% absence seizures. The first myoclonic seizure occurred between 9 and 24 years while the frst GTC seizure occurred between 10 and 32 years. Myoclonic seizures (83% of patients) and GTC seizures (70% of patients) occurred most often immediately after awaking. The most frequent provocative factors were insufficient sleep, alcohol abuse and tiredness. Epilepsy in the family was present in 39%, focal neurological deficiency in 9% and pathological findings on of CT and MRI in 7% of patients. Waking EEG was pathological in 77% of patients; it included generalized spike-wave discharges in 73%, multiple spike-wave complexes in 33% and focal discharges in 12% of patients, respectively. In all 26 patients tested, sleep EEG was pathological most often with multiple spike-wave complexes in 85% and 3-4 Hz spike-wave complexes in 57% of patients. The correct diagnosis of JME following a comprehensive examination was made in 24 (56%) patients after a delay of 1 to 35 years. In 24 patients with delayed diagnosis of JME the replacement of earlier medication with valproic acid (VPA) induced remission in 18 patients (75%) while 1 patient (4%) experienced a reduction in the number of seizures. Five patients (21%) did not respond to VPA medication: 2 due to a weak compliance, another 2 due to inefficient medication and 1 because of the preexistent malabsorption syndrome. In 19 patients (44%) with initial diagnosis of JME, VPA was introduced immediately upon diagnosis. Of them, 15 (79%) had excellent response to VPA, 1 refused therapy and for 3 patients there is no information. In 2 patients VPA was substituted due to side effects (hepatotoxicity and alopetia) with lamotrigine (low doses), which brought about decrease in frequency and mitigation in myoclonic seizures.  相似文献   

4.
This review was conducted to evaluate the long-term prognosis of children responding to vigabatrin by examining the incidence of increased seizure frequency, loss of efficacy, and appearance of new seizures in a cohort of 196 children (mean age, 68.2 months; range, 2 months to 19 years) with drug-resistant epilepsy, who had received vigabatrin as add-on treatment in clinical trials. The results indicate that an increase in seizure frequency was uncommon, occurring in only 10% of children with highly drug-resistant epilepsy and that it usually appears shortly after the initiation of treatment. It was clearly not dose-dependent and most often occurred in patients with nonprogressive myoclonic epilepsy. No specific seizure type was specially involved and usually the problem reversed on discontinuing vigabatrin. Loss of efficacy was also uncommon (12% of patients), and again no specific seizure type was found to be associated. Epilepsy syndrome does seem to be a better predictor of loss of efficacy because it occurred most often in symptomatic generalized epilepsies and cryptogenic infantile spasms. A total of 21 patients (11%) developed genuinely new types of seizures. Fifteen of these patients developed new partial seizures that had little impact on the patients' overall clinical improvement. The new partial seizures were better tolerated than the initial seizure type which in most cases had disappeared. Approximately 3% of patients experienced new generalized seizures that aggravated their initial condition. These occurred most often in patients with nonprogressive myoclonic epilepsy; therefore vigabatrin should be used with particular caution in such patients.  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: To study the electroclinical features of typical absence status (TAS) in adults with syndromes of idiopathic generalized epilepsies (IGEs). METHODS: Twenty-one patients with one or more spells of TAS were identified among 136 consecutive adult patients with IGEs. All patients with TAS had comprehensive electroclinical investigations and EEG or video-EEG recorded absences. RESULTS: TAS occurred in 24.4% of 86 patients who had IGEs with typical absences alone or in combination with other seizures presisting in adult life. The prevalence of TAS appeared to be syndrome related, ranging from as high as 57.1% in perioral myoclonia with absences and 46.2% in "phantom" absences with GTCS to as low as 6.7% in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. A varying degree of impairment of cognition was the cardinal clinical symptom shared in all TAS, but corresponding syndromes of IGE were often betrayed by other symptoms such as eyelid or perioral myoclonia. In phantom absences with GTCS, TAS was more numerous (p < or = 0.05) and more frequently the first overt seizure type (p = 0.006) than in any other IGE. Only in the syndrome of eyelid myoclonia with absences, TAS was always situation related, mainly as a result of antiepileptic drug discontinuation. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical EEG semiology and prevalence of TAS appear to be syndrome related with the highest prevalence in the syndromes of perioral myoclonia with absences and phantom absences with GTCS (p = 0.0024).  相似文献   

6.
Recently, a trinucleotide repeat expansion in intron 1 of the frataxin gene on chromosome 9p13 has been identified as the genetic defect in Friedreich's ataxia (FA). We have identified two patients exhibiting generalized chorea in the absence of cerebellar signs who were homozygous for this intron 1 expansion. Chorea as a rare manifestation of FA has previously been controversial. This is the first report of chorea in patients confirmed to have the FA genetic abnormality and broadens further the clinical phenotype associated with the FA genotype.  相似文献   

7.
We report the case of a mentally retarded 30 y.o. patient with partial trisomy of chromosome 9, affected by epilepsy. Following treatment with antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), the patient developed several rare complications: after beginning therapy with phenytoin, the patient developed pseudolymphoma; after monotherapy with carbamazepine (CBZ), the patient thereafter developed myoclonic jerks of upper and lower limbs upon awakening; after one year of treatment with valproate (VPA) the patient developed clinical and immuno-haematological signs of SLE. Gradual withdrawal of AED, obtained clinical remission. The possibility that the chromosomal abnormality of the patient was responsible for the three rare complications observed during AED therapy is considered.  相似文献   

8.
Partial seizures and asymmetric abnormalities seen on electroencephalogram (EEG) are infrequent in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, but when present, can lead to a misdiagnosis of partial seizures. We report four patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy who had generalized spike or polyspike and wave discharges on EEG in addition to clinical and EEG evidence of focality. The clinical course and response to therapy was similar to that in typical juvenile myoclonic epilepsy.  相似文献   

9.
Idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE) comprises several subsyndromes. These are principally: benign neonatal familial convulsions, benign neonatal convulsions, benign myoclonic epilepsy in infancy, childhood absence epilepsy, juvenile absence epilepsy, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, epilepsy with generalised tonic-clonic seizures on awakening. In addition, there are less well-recognized syndromes, such as eyelid myoclonia with absences. The pathophysiology of the IGE syndromes is not fully understood; it is evident that typical absences are the result of abnormal oscillations between the thalamus and cerebral cortex. Genetic studies are in progress to elucidate the biochemical defects underlying the conditions. The clinical and electroencephalographic features of the individual subsyndromes are distinct, but some patients may be difficult to classify into a particular subgroup. A correct syndromic diagnosis is important, as treatment strategies differ for patients with the different forms of IGE, and it is necessary for genetic research.  相似文献   

10.
The long-term prognosis of 185 children with epilepsy, who continued to attend the Clinic for Epileptic Children, the Department of Pediatrics, the University of Tokyo, beyond the age of 18 years, was reported. The length of follow-up varied from three to 20 years, but most of them were followed longer than 10 years. The presumed etiology in these children was divided into a cryptogenic group (124, 67.0%) and a symptomatic group (61). The types of seizures were classified into grand mal (86 cases), focal seizure (27), petit mal absence (4), psychomotro seizure (5), infantile spasms (7), and so on. It may be noted that the highest frequency of grand mal was demonstrated, while the incidences of infantile spasms, myoclonic seizure, and akinetic seizure were low in the series. Only 28 children (15.1%) had complications of physical and/or mental handicaps. The follow-up study revealed that 140 patients (75.7%) had been seizure-free in the last 12 months. One hundred and fifteen of them had no seizures for five years or longer. On the other hand, electroencephalographic abnormalities generally continued for a long time after disappearance of seizures. Eightly-one of well-controlled patients were gradually decreasing the doses of anticonvulsants. As for seizure types, it is noted that focal seizure, psychomotor seizure, and infantile spasms were relatively difficult to be controlled. Except for 27 patients, most of them attended normal schools, including junior colleges or universities, and engaged in various occupations. Fifteen female patients had already married, and out of 13 babies who were born from these patients, there were one with ventricular septal defect, one with mental deficiency, and one with anencephaly, while the rest were entirely normal. Additional problems on withdrawal of anticonvulsants after a long-term seizure-free period, and what a medical system should be for treatment of epilepsy in children up to their adulthood were discussed.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVES: The clinical data on individuals who were diagnosed to have juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) on the basis of myoclonic jerks alone has been analysed. The points in favour and against individuals with only myoclonic jerks being classified as "affected" for research on JME are discussed. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied 15 persons diagnosed with JME on the basis of only myoclonic jerks in a series of 161 patients with JME and their relatives. Detailed information on the seizure types in JME patients and their family members was collected. All affected individuals were examined by one person and had at least one conventional scalp EEG. CT/MRI of the brain was done as and when indicated. RESULTS: Nine of these were probands while 6 were the relatives of JME patients. The EEG was abnormal in 8 of 9 probands and 1 of 6 relatives with only myoclonic jerks. All the 9 probands and 2 relatives with only myoclonic jerks were treated with anti-epileptic drugs. Three of the 4 relatives had spontaneous remission of jerks after variable intervals. Four of 15 persons with only myoclonic jerks had a first degree relative with definite JME. CONCLUSIONS: It appears that persons with myoclonic jerks alone may represent a benign subgroup of JME that may be genetically distinct from classic JME and the jerks may even spontaneously remit in a few cases. It is suggested that those persons with only myoclonic jerks and a first degree relationship with a definite diagnosis of JME can be classified as "affected" for inclusion into molecular studies, till molecular tools are available to settle the issue of phenotypic variations in hereditary neurological disorders like JME.  相似文献   

12.
We describe clinical, electrophysiological and genetic features in 44 patients with Unverricht-Lündborg disease from 19 families living in North African countries (Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco). The mean age of patients was 25.3 years; mean age was at onset 11.3 years. The disease began more frequently with seizures (91 per cent) or myoclonus (80 p. 100) than ataxia (16 p. 100). Subsequently myoclonus and generalized seizures were present in all patients, cerebellar signs were absent in four cases. EEG findings included normal background activity (90 p. 100), spontaneous fast generalized spikes (93 p. 100) and photosensitivity (70 p. 100). Antiepileptic polytherapy (clonazepam and/or phenobarbital and/or valporic acid) was used in 84 per cent of cases. Antiepileptic drugs were more effective in controlling epileptic seizures (less than one seizure/month in 60 p. 100) than myocloni which persisted daily in 64 p. 100 of cases. Mean duration of the disease was 13.5 years. One patient died of status epilepticus. Consanguinity was noted in 17 families (first degree in 15 families). Linkage to chromosome 21q 22.3 was confirmed in 11 families. We noted an inter and intrafamilial variability of clinical signs and disease course.  相似文献   

13.
Vigabatrin and lamotrigine are two new antiepileptic drugs which have recently become available. Vigabatrin is a specific and irreversible inhibitor of the enzyme gamma-amino-butyric-acid (GABA) transferase. Its administration leads to a long lasting increase in GABA, the most important inhibitory neurotransmitter. Vigabatrin is effective in both adults and children in the treatment of partial and especially complex-partial seizures. After add-on in vigabatrin to their therapeutic drug regime in 116 of our own patients, 39% of previously therapy resistant patients reported a reduced seizure frequency of at least 50% and 6% of them became seizure free. In secondarily generalized epilepsies the best results were observed in axial (infantile) spasms. In addition there was some improvement in tonic and convulsive seizures. Single patients showed increased myoclonic and clonic seizures. Initial efficacy was not always maintained during follow-up. In the experience of other authors, vigabatrin is also effective in the treatment of infantile spasms. It is not suitable for the treatment of generalized epilepsies with absences and myoclonic seizures. Most patients tolerate vigabatrin very well, although psychotic episodes are sometimes reported. So far there have been no relevant hepatic or hematological side effects. Lamotrigine is also effective in the treatment of partial seizures, for which it is approved. However, uncontrolled studies and our own experience have shown that it is even more effective in generalized seizures. As add-on therapy in absences and tonic or tonic-clonic seizures, a significant reduction in seizure frequency--in individual cases seizure freedom--can be achieved.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
L-Deprenyl (selegiline), a selective inhibitor of monoamine oxidase type B, has recently been shown to exert anticonvulsant and antiepileptogenic effects in the kindling model of partial (focal) epilepsy. In the present study, we examined if L-deprenyl exerts anticonvulsant effects in standard rodent models of generalized seizures. In addition to anticonvulsant activity, behavioral effects induced by L-deprenyl were monitored closely. To assess the stereoselectivity of anticonvulsant and behavioral effects of deprenyl, the D-enantiomer was included in the studies. Furthermore, the antiepileptic drug phenobarbital was used for comparison. The following tests were performed in mice: 1) the threshold for tonic electroconvulsions; 2) the maximal electroshock seizure test with fixed supramaximal (suprathreshold) stimulation; 3) the threshold for myoclonic, clonic and tonic seizures in response to i.v. infusion of pentylenetetrazole (PTZ); 4) the s.c. PTZ seizure test, with a fixed dose of PTZ (80 microgram/kg) for seizure induction; 5) the rotarod and chimney tests for determination of motor impairment. Furthermore, animals were observed in cage and open field for stereotyped behavior and other behavioral abnormalities. L-Deprenyl, tested at doses of 1 to 40 microgram/kg i.p., significantly increased myoclonic and clonic PTZ thresholds and the threshold for tonic electroconvulsions, whereas D-deprenyl was either ineffective or exhibited a lower anticonvulsant potency than L-deprenyl. Both drugs were ineffective in the maximal electroshock seizure and s.c. PTZ seizure tests. In contrast to the higher anticonvulsant potency of L-deprenyl in seizure threshold tests, D-deprenyl was more potent than L-deprenyl to induce behavioral abnormalities, such as hyperlocomotion. The data indicate that L-deprenyl exerts anticonvulsant activity against different seizure types. This anticonvulsant activity and the previously reported neuroprotective and cognition-enhancing action of L-deprenyl offer a unique combination of drug effects which might be of clinical benefit in patients with epilepsy.  相似文献   

15.
Idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE) is characterized by recurring generalized seizures in the absence of detectable brain lesions and/or metabolic abnormalities. Twin and family studies suggest that genetic factors play a key part in IGE. A multilocus model appears to best fit the observed inheritance patterns. Mapping of IGE-related genes has been previously attempted using parametric methods, with conflicting results. In particular, recent evidence argues both for and against a chromosome 6p locus (EJM1) for juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, a subtype of IGE. We have approached the problem of mapping IGE loci using non-parametric methods, which have recently been successful for other complex diseases. No evidence for linkage to chromosome 6p was obtained. However, we obtained evidence for involvement of a locus at chromosome 8q24, close to the marker D8S256. The same 8q24 region was previously implicated in families with benign neonatal familial convulsions (BNFC), a generalized epilepsy syndrome that is inherited as a simple dominant mendelian trait. There is an apparent conserved syntenic group of genes in human 8q24 and a region of mouse chromosome 15, which harbors the stargazer (stg) locus. Homozygous mutant mice at the stg locus show a form of generalized epilepsy that resembles human absence epilepsy. Our findings may have implications for a locus on 8q24 predisposing to IGE.  相似文献   

16.
An 11-year-old girl who had the positive-negative myoclonus and the history of the generalized tonic clonic seizure was electrophysiologically studied. She had no siblings with either myoclonus or epilepsy, and her intellectual level was normal. She had no other neurological deficits including ataxia, pyramidal and extrapyramidal signs. Surface EMG showed a brief increase in the EMG activity followed by the silent period associated with positive and negative myoclonus during sustained wrist extension. Giant SEP and C reflex (38.6 ms) following electric stimulation of the median nerve at the wrist were obtained in the resting condition and the silent period (about 180 ms) following C reflex was obtained during voluntary contraction. Jerk-locked back averaging of the EEG time-locked to the onset of the myoclonic discharge recorded from the right biceps muscle showed a cortical spike at the left central region preceding the myoclonus onset by 12.6 ms. The latency of C reflex in this case was very short compared with that of previously reported cortical reflex myoclonus. The estimated cortical delay between the arrival of the somatosensory volley and the motor cortex discharge responsible for the C reflex was -1.0 ms and this value was shorter than that in patients with typical cortical reflex myoclonus (mean 3.7 +/- 1.1 ms). Conditioning stimuli (C) of the right median nerve at the wrist started to facilitate the amplitude of the motor evoked potential recorded from the right abductor pollicis brevis muscle after magnetic test stimuli (T) of the left motor cortex at 20 ms of the C-T interval. This C-T interval was shorter than that (24.6 +/- 1.6 ms) in patients with the typical cortical myoclonus. These electrophysiological findings suggested the shorter reflex pathway of the cortical reflex myoclonus in this case than in typical cortical reflex myoclonus. We speculated that the myoclonus was based upon the direct sensory projection from the thalamus to the motor cortex in this case.  相似文献   

17.
We propose an epileptic seizure classification based exclusively on ictal semiology. In this semiological seizure classification (SSC), seizures are classified as follows: a. Auras are ictal manifestations having sensory, psychosensory, and experiential symptoms. b. Autonomic seizures are seizures in which the main ictal manifestations are objectively documented autonomic alterations. c. "Dialeptic" seizures have as their main ictal manifestations an alteration of consciousness that is independent of ictal EEG manifestations. The new term "dialeptic" seizure has been coined to differentiate this concept from absence seizures (dialeptic seizures with a generalized ictal EEG) and complex partial seizures (dialeptic seizures with a focal ictal EEG). d. Motor seizures are characterized mainly by motor symptoms and are subclassified as simple or complex. Simple motor seizures are characterized by simple, unnatural movements that can be elicited by electrical stimulation of the primary and supplementary motor area (myoclonic, tonic, clonic and tonic-clonic, versive). Complex motor seizures are characterized by complex motor movements that resemble natural movements but that occur in an inappropriate setting ("automatisms"). e. Special seizures include seizures characterized by "negative" features (atonic, astatic, hypomotor, akinetic, and aphasic seizures). The SSC identifies in detail the somatotopic distribution of the ictal semiology as well as the seizure evolution. The advantages of a pure SSC, as opposed to the current classification of the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE), which is actually a classification of electroclinical syndromes, are discussed.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVES: This prospective study was conducted to evaluate the usefulness of venous lactate assay in the diagnosis of generalized seizures. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Over a three month period, 78 consecutive adults admitted to the emergency unit for unconsciousness were included in the study. Three study groups were defined: patients with generalized seizures (n = 22), unconscious patients without seizure (n = 34) and known epileptic patients with unexplained malaises (n = 22). Patients with a disease susceptible of increasing lactate levels were excluded. Peripheral venous blood was drawn to determine lactates, bicarbonates and pH on a blood gas analyzer. All determinations were performed within 5 minutes of blood withdrawal. CPK level was also determined with an enzymatic method. RESULTS: In patients who had seizures, venous lactate levels were higher than those in patients who had no seizures: 4.3 +/- 0.5 mmol/l in generalized seizure patients versus 1.64 +/- 0.1 and 2.2 +/- 1.39 in unconscious patients without seizure and known epileptic patients with unexplained malaise respectively. The threshold lactate level of 2.5 mmol/l given by ROC curves gave a 0.97 specificity and a 0.73 sensitivity. DISCUSSION: The acidosis observed in patients with generalized seizures results from the combined effects of respiratory and metabolic acidosis. High lactate level would be a consequence of hypoxemia, per seizure rise in catecholamines, and aerobic and anaerobic metabolism in muscles during the tonic-clonic phase. In patients presenting in an unconscious state, increased lactate levels, even when determined up to 2 hours after venous blood withdrawal, could be a useful parameter for the diagnosis of epileptic seizure.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical and EEG features of adult patients with very mild absences, late onset generalised tonic clonic seizures, and frequent absence status. METHODS: Patients were referrals to a clinic for epilepsies. They all had clinical assessment and EEG, video EEG, or both for documentation of absences. RESULTS: Of 86 adults with idiopathic generalised epilepsies and EEG/video-EEG documented absences, 13 patients showed similar clinico-EEG features with: (a) "phantom absences" consisting of mild ictal impairment of cognition associated with brief (3-4 s), generalised 3-4 Hz spike/multiple spike and slow wave discharges; (b) infrequent, mainly late onset, generalised tonic clonic seizures, and (c), absence status which occurred in six of them either in isolation or terminating with generalised tonic clonic seizures. None of the patients had myoclonic jerks or photosensitivity. Two patients were father and daughter and another patient had a family history of infrequent generalised tonic clonic seizures. CONCLUSION: It seems that this is an idiopathic generalised epilepsy syndrome in adults which has not been previously recognised.  相似文献   

20.
Congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome (CBPS) is a recently described, neuronal migration disorder, characterized by pseudobulbar palsy, epilepsy and mental retardation and bilateral perisylvian dysplasia. A 15-year-old boy was diagnosed with CBPS according to the typical clinical, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features. The patient was suffering from atypical absence seizures, repeating daily in spite of antiepileptic drug therapy, since age 7 years. He had also experienced rare generalized tonic-clonic seizures and complex partial seizures. Neurological examination showed severe restriction of tongue movements, severe dysarthria, dysphagia, facial diplegia, mild pyramidal signs and moderate mental retardation. A computed tomographic (CT) scan demonstrated bilateral perisylvian enlargement. The diagnosis was corrected with MRI after six years. Frequent irregular generalized spike and wave abnormalities and focal sharp and slow waves over the posterior regions of both hemispheres were shown by electroencephalograms (EEG). The patient was treated with Na-Valproate, carbamazepine and lamotrigine but did now show any significant change in seizure frequency in the eight-year follow-up period. Intractable seizures, mental retardation and particularly congenital pseudobulbar palsy suggest this congenital entity. Those patients who exhibit these typically clinical features, must have MRI.  相似文献   

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