The goal of this study is to evaluate the response of epileptic seizures associated with cerebral arteriovenous malformations following radiosurgery and determine the factors associated with a positive outcome. The series included 210 patients (123 men, 87 women) with a mean age of 33. One hundred seventy three patients out of 210 were controlled after radiosurgery. Seizures completely disappeared in 58% of cases and decreased in 18%. Anti-epileptic treatment was stopped in 44%. Sex and age upon seizure appearance were not found as determining factors in patients whose seizures disappeared after radiosurgery. Generalized seizures disappeared following radiosurgery in 90.7%, partial secondary generalized seizures in 53.5%, and partial seizures in only 39.6%. Frontal or temporal malformations are associated with a better response after radiosurgery than sylvian or rolandic location. Seizure disappearance was maximal in case of isolated seizure prior to the radiosurgery (84.4%), was reduced to 61.2% when seizures were limited to 2 to 20, and disappeared in 21.4% in severe seizures. Epilepsy present less than 3 years prior to radiosurgery disappeared in 71.9%; was reduced to 45% when the delay was over 3 years. Seizures disappeared in 64.4% when the malformation was obliterated, they were reduced to 46.9% when malformations persisted. The persistence of severe seizures following radiosurgery was linked to persistence of the malformation. On the other hand early seizures occurred in 3.3% during the first 48 hours following radiosurgery; they disappeared in 72.2% after that period. De novo seizures also occurred in 1.7% and disappeared in all these cases. In conclusion, seizures associated with cerebral arteriovenous malformations respond well to radiosurgery; the malformation obliteration evokes its association with the seizure; the seizure disappearance in spite of persistence of the malformation evokes the positive effect of radiotherapy on epileptic seizures.
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Epilepsia Open
January 2025
Faculty of Medicine, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Mexico (UNAM), Copilco Universidad, Mexico city, Mexico.
The potential of dietary interventions, particularly the use of the ketogenic diet in patients with Psychogenic Non-Epileptic Seizures (PNES), remains underexplored. This study aimed to assess the feasibility of a 6-week ketogenic diet (Modified Atkins Diet, MAD) intervention in adult patients with PNES and to compare its effects on PNES frequency and other variables against a control healthy diet (CD). A feasibility pilot randomized controlled trial was conducted at a tertiary neurology hospital, enrolling outpatients diagnosed with PNES and assigning them to either MAD or CD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia
January 2025
Epilepsy Center, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Acute symptomatic seizures, occurring shortly after a central nervous system insult, constitute nearly half of all seizure cases. However, there is a conspicuous absence of clear, comprehensive, and cohesive guidelines for the management of these seizures with antiseizure medications, especially their duration of use. This lack of consensus on the optimal duration of therapy leads to prolonged treatments that may carry adverse consequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe discuss an interesting case of a 65-year-old man with multiple dissociative episodes which previously had been assessed as fugues. After evaluation in the memory clinic these episodes appeared to be generalized epileptic seizures, with an electro-encephalographic diagnosis of non-convulsive status epilepticus. Throughout this case, the different features that characterize an epileptic versus a psychiatric etiology are being discussed as well as other differential diagnostic considerations.
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January 2025
Department of Neurology, Institute of Neuroscience, Key Laboratory of Neurogenetics and Channelopathies of Guangdong Province and the Ministry of Education of China, the Second Affiliated Hospital, Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China.
The RYR3 gene encodes a brain-type ryanodine receptor that functions to release calcium from intracellular storage and plays an essential role in calcium signaling. The associations between RYR3 variants and brain disorders remain unknown. We performed whole-exome sequencing in patients with idiopathic (non-lesional) partial epilepsy of unknown etiology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Child Neurol
January 2025
Department of Neuropediatrics, University Hospital of Schleswig Holstein, Kiel, Germany.
Although many reports have described the characteristics of Williams-Beuren syndrome, few specifically analyzed epilepsy in patients with Williams-Beuren syndrome. In this retrospective study, we map the prevalence, types, and prognosis of epileptic seizures in a large cohort of 589 patients with Williams-Beuren syndrome, as well as associations between deletions of the membrane-associated guanylate kinase inverted-2-gene (2 gene), which is associated with infantile spasms (IS), and epilepsy in patients with Williams-Beuren syndrome.Our findings indicate that the incidence of epilepsy in patients with Williams-Beuren syndrome is approximately 1.
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