Literature DB >> 16933125

Epilepsy in patients with spina bifida in the lumbosacral region.

Fumiaki Yoshida1, Takato Morioka, Kimiaki Hashiguchi, Tadao Kawamura, Yasushi Miyagi, Shinji Nagata, Futoshi Mihara, Mayu Ohshio, Tomio Sasaki.   

Abstract

This study aimed to assess the relevance of epilepsy and spina bifida in the lumbosacral region. We evaluated 75 patients with spina bifida admitted to the Kyushu University Hospital from 1980 to 2004. Patients were classified as having meningocele (MC, 4 cases), myelomeningocele (MMC, 6), myeloschisis (MS, 45), and lumbosacral lipoma (LL, 20). Nine cases had epileptic disorders, and all showed MS. Meticulous neuroradiological investigations revealed cerebral abnormalities such as polymicrogyria or hypogenesis of the corpus callosum in all epileptic cases. Locations of cerebral abnormalities topographically correlated with areas of interictal EEG abnormalities. Although all epileptic cases had ventriculoperitoneal (VP) shunt for hydrocephalus before the onset of epilepsy, interictal EEG abnormalities could not be explained by location of the VP shunt. In all LL patients, neither history of epilepsy nor cerebral abnormalities were noted on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Epileptogenesis in spina bifida patients seemed to correlate with coexisting cerebral abnormalities in MS patients rather than with the VP shunt. However, not all spina bifida patients associated with cerebral abnormalities had epilepsy, and not all cerebral abnormalities were epileptogenic, suggesting that epilepsy in spina bifida patients was multifactorial.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16933125     DOI: 10.1007/s10143-006-0035-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurosurg Rev        ISSN: 0344-5607            Impact factor:   3.042


  22 in total

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  1 in total

1.  DiGeorge Syndrome with Sacral Myelomeningocele and Epilepsy.

Authors:  Gülsüm Alkan; Melike Keser Emiroglu; Ayse Kartal
Journal:  J Pediatr Neurosci       Date:  2017 Oct-Dec
  1 in total

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