Hormonal 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 PDFTBC1D24 is a newly recognized gene in which variations lead to variable clinical phenotypes including drug-resistant epilepsy. We report four patients with novel variants of TBC1D24 demonstrating drug-resistant focal epilepsy, developmental delays, and head growth deceleration. All patients had seizure semiologies consisting of prolonged, unilateral, focal clonic activity of the arm, leg or face, in addition to generalized clonic or myoclonic seizures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutism affects 1 in 110 new births, and it has no single etiology with uniform agreement. This has a significant impact on the quality of life for individuals who have been diagnosed with autism. Although autism has a spectrum quality with a shared diagnosis, it presents a uniquely different clinical appearance in each individual.
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