Literature DB >> 12200741

Treatment and long-term prognosis of myoclonic-astatic epilepsy of early childhood.

H Oguni1, T Tanaka, K Hayashi, M Funatsuka, M Sakauchi, S Shirakawa, M Osawa.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: We retrospectively studied patients with myoclonic-astatic epilepsy of early childhood (MAE) to investigate the most effective treatment and long-term seizure and intellectual prognosis.
SUBJECTS: Eighty-one patients with MAE were recruited from among 3600 patients with childhood epilepsy according to the ILAE criteria of MAE.
METHODS: We retrospectively investigated the clinical characteristics and ultimate prognosis of the patients with MAE from the medical records. The effects of various antiepileptic drugs, ketogenic diet and ACTH treatments on myoclonic-astatic seizures (MS/AS), apparently a hallmark of this unique epileptic syndrome, were also studied.
RESULTS: MS/AS in 89 % of the patients disappeared within 1 to 3 years despite initial resistance, but generalized tonic-clonic or clonic seizures [G(T)CS] tended to continue. The most effective treatment for the MS/AS was ketogenic diet, followed by ACTH and ESM. At the last follow-up, 55 patients or 68 % of all the patients had remission of epilepsy, 11 patients or 14 % experienced a recurrence of GTCS after a long remission period but easily regained control, and the remaining 15 patients or 18 % continued to have seizures and intellectual outcomes were poor. In one half of these patients with poor outcomes, repeated minor epileptic status and nocturnal generalized tonic seizures persisted. A family history of epilepsy and a combination of minor epileptic status are risk factors for poor outcomes.
CONCLUSION: MAE is considered to form a clinical spectrum ranging in its main seizure type from myoclonic to atonic, and in seizure and intellectual outcomes from benign to malignant. The overall prognosis, despite initial resistance to treatment, appears to be much better than originally thought when ILAE definitions excluding SME are followed.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12200741     DOI: 10.1055/s-2002-33675

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropediatrics        ISSN: 0174-304X            Impact factor:   1.947


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