We present the results of treatment with vigabatrin in the polytherapy of resistant infantile epilepsy. A retrospective review of 55 children with resistant epilepsy aged between 2 months and 15 years was carried out between January 1992 and January 1995. Semiologically, the crises treated were simple partial crises (CPS), complex partial crises (CPC), West's syndrome, the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and polymorphic crises. The efficacy of the drug (defined as a 50% or more reduction in crises), secondary effects and the reduction in the number of drugs necessary were evaluated. 60% of the children studied improved. 20% became completely free of crises. 34% remained unchanged and 3% became worse. In West's syndrome 100% responded satisfactorily, as did 80% of the cases of partial crises, but only 40% of those with Lennox's syndrome responded. Generalized tonic-clonic crises did not respond, and myoclonic crises became worse. Aetiologically, there was greater improvement in the symptomic cases than in the essential cases, the improvement being 70% while 5 patients with tuberose sclerosis responded particularly well. Medication was stopped in one case because of side-effects, due to a psychiatric disturbance, and in another case vigabatrin caused transitory side-effects. In 10% of the subjects the initial efficacy wore off around 6 months later. We have shown the usefulness of vigabatrin in the polytherapy of infantile epilepsy, which is resistant to conventional epileptic drugs, mainly in simple and complex partial crises and in West's syndrome. Its minimal side-effects and the favourable response in over 50% of cases make it an extremely useful drug.
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