Purpose: Early posttraumatic seizures (EPTS) occur after pediatric traumatic brain injury and have been associated with unfavorable outcomes. We aimed to characterize the relationship among quantitative EEG characteristics of early posttraumatic seizures, cerebral and somatic physiologic measures.
Methods: Differences in baseline physiologic, neuroimaging, and demographic characteristics between those with and without early posttraumatic seizures were investigated using Mann-Whitney U test or Fisher exact test.
Background: Acute necrotizing encephalopathy (ANE) is a rare condition associated with rapid progression to coma and high incidence of morbidity and mortality.
Methods: Clinical, electroencephalographic (EEG), and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) characteristics and immunomodulatory therapy timing were retrospectively analyzed in children with ANE. ANE severity scores (ANE-SS) and MRI scores were also assessed.
Objective: Genetic variants of the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) cause autosomal dominant sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy. Approximately 30% of autosomal dominant sleep-related hypermotor epilepsy patients are medically intractable. In preclinical models, pathogenic nAChR variants cause a gain of function mutation with sensitivity to acetylcholine antagonists and agonists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe goal of this project was to evaluate if severity of electroencephalogram (EEG) during or shortly after being placed on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) would correlate with neuroimaging abnormalities, and if that could be used as an early indicator of neurologic injury. This was a retrospective chart review spanning November 2009 to May 2018. Patients who had an EEG recording during ECMO or within 48 hours after being decannulated (early group) or within 3 months of being on ECMO (late group) were included if they also had ECMO-related neuroimaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHormonal therapy is the first-line treatment for infantile spasms and is sometimes used in combination with topiramate for better seizure control and potentially improved developmental outcomes. Retrospective review of pediatric patients with infantile spasms, with data compiled on patient sex, age at onset, etiology, electroencephalographic and imaging findings, topiramate use, spasm resolution (at one, six, and 12 months), and developmental outcome (at 12 months). Of 105 patients screened, 55 (28 female) met inclusion criteria (28 [51%] had spasms with known etiology and 27 [49%] had spasms with unknown etiology).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) are severe neurodevelopmental disorders often beginning in infancy or early childhood that are characterized by intractable seizures, abundant epileptiform activity on EEG, and developmental impairment or regression. CACNA1E is highly expressed in the central nervous system and encodes the α-subunit of the voltage-gated Ca2.3 channel, which conducts high voltage-activated R-type calcium currents that initiate synaptic transmission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSemin Pediatr Neurol
July 2018
We report a 10-month-old boy with treatment-resistant infantile spasms associated with hypothalamic hamartoma (HH). Electroencephalography before surgical treatment showed modified hypsarrhythmia. Transventricular endoscopic resection and disconnection resulted in immediate and enduring disappearance of the epileptic spasms and improvement in the postoperative electroencephalography.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Reflex epilepsies represent a form of epilepsy in which unique modes of seizure precipitation are characterized by endogenous or exogenous stimuli. Hot water epilepsy represents a subtype of reflex epilepsy in which seizure precipitation arises from the act of immersing the head with hot water. Bathing epilepsy represents another subtype of reflex epilepsy in which seizure precipitation arises from the immersion with water at lukewarm temperatures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF