AI Article Synopsis

  • About 20% of pediatric epilepsy patients resist multiple anti-crisis drugs, adversely affecting their neuropsychological state, quality of life, and prognosis.
  • A study evaluated the neuropsychological profiles of 19 children with drug-resistant focal epilepsy, noting gender distribution, brain focus areas, and significant cognitive and adaptive difficulties.
  • Findings revealed greater deficits in planning among patients with frontal focus and higher anxiety symptoms in those with temporal focus, along with a correlation between disease duration and impairment in IQ and adaptive skills.

Article Abstract

Introduction: At least 20% of paediatric patients with epilepsy present resistance to multiple anti-crisis drugs in trials, which has a negative impact on their neuropsychological state, quality of life and prognosis; it is therefore necessary to document their neuropsychological profile in order to improve the clinical approach to them.

Aims: To describe the neuropsychological profile (cognitive, academic, behavioural, emotional, adaptive, sleep disturbances and quality of life) of paediatric patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy in the frontal, temporal and occipital lobes, and to compare performance between patients with frontal and temporal foci, and to assess the link between the duration of the condition, the frequency of seizures and the amount of anti-crisis drugs and the neuropsychological profile.

Patients And Methods: The neuropsychological profile of 19 paediatric patients with a diagnosis of pharmacoresistant epilepsy with a mean age of 10.89 years was evaluated.

Results: 57.9% of the 19 patients were men. 63.2% presented frontal focus; 26.3% presented temporal focus; and 10.5% presented occipital focus. Deficiencies in attention, comprehension, verbal memory, working memory and processing speed, in addition to adaptive difficulties were observed. When the patients with frontal and temporal focus were compared, the former were found to present greater deficits in planning, while the patients with temporal focus presented more severe symptoms of anxiety. Patients with a longer disease duration were found to present greater impairment to their intelligence quotient and adaptive behavioural skills.

Conclusions: Pharmacoresistant epilepsy in paediatric patients affects intelligence quotient and adaptive skills, as well as attention, memory and executive functions, and neuropsychological intervention programmes must therefore be implemented to improve these patients' quality of life.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11407462PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.33588/rn.7812.2024096DOI Listing

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