Literature DB >> 22945967

Recognition memory is impaired in children after prolonged febrile seizures.

Marina M Martinos1, Michael Yoong, Shekhar Patil, Richard F M Chin, Brian G Neville, Rod C Scott, Michelle de Haan.   

Abstract

Children with a history of a prolonged febrile seizure show signs of acute hippocampal injury on magnetic resonance imaging. In addition, animal studies have shown that adult rats who suffered febrile seizures during development reveal memory impairments. Together, these lines of evidence suggest that memory impairments related to hippocampal injury may be evident in human children after prolonged febrile seizures. The current study addressed this question by investigating memory abilities in 26 children soon after a prolonged febrile seizure (median: 37.5 days) and compared their results to those of 37 normally developing children. Fifteen patients were reassessed at a mean of 12.5 months after their first assessment to determine the transiency of any observed effects. We used the visual paired comparison task to test memory abilities in our group, as this task does not depend on verbal abilities and also because successful performance on the task has been proven to depend on the presence of functional hippocampi. Our findings show that patients perform as well as controls in the absence of a delay between the learning phase and the memory test, suggesting that both groups are able to form representations of the presented stimulus. However, after a 5-min delay, patients' recognition memory is not different from chance, and comparison of patients and controls points to an accelerated forgetting rate in the prolonged febrile seizure group. The patients' performance was not related to the time elapsed from the acute event or the duration of the prolonged febrile seizure, suggesting that the observed effect is not a by-product of the seizure itself or a delayed effect of medication administered to terminate the seizure. By contrast, performance was related to hippocampal size; participants with the smallest mean hippocampal volumes revealed the biggest drop in performance from the immediate to the delayed paradigm. At follow-up, children were still showing deficiencies in recognizing a face after a 5-min delay. Similarly, this suggests that the observed memory impairments are not a transient effect of the prolonged febrile seizures. This is the first report of such impairments in humans, and it is clinically significant given the links between mesial temporal sclerosis and prolonged febrile seizures. The persistence of these impairments a year onwards signals the potential benefits of intervention in these children who run the risk of developing episodic memory deficits in later childhood.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22945967      PMCID: PMC3470707          DOI: 10.1093/brain/aws213

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  44 in total

1.  Visual paired comparison performance is impaired in a patient with selective hippocampal lesions and relatively intact item recognition.

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Authors:  Y C Chang; N W Guo; S T Wang; C C Huang; J J Tsai
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3.  Impaired recognition memory in rats after damage to the hippocampus.

Authors:  R E Clark; S M Zola; L R Squire
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4.  Infants' recognition memory for faces.

Authors:  J F Fagan
Journal:  J Exp Child Psychol       Date:  1972-12

5.  Intelligence, behaviour and scholastic achievement subsequent to febrile convulsions: an analysis of discordant twin-pairs.

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6.  Genetic and related aetiological factors in temporal lobe epilepsy. A review.

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7.  Hippocampal abnormalities after prolonged febrile convulsion: a longitudinal MRI study.

Authors:  Rod C Scott; Martin D King; David G Gadian; Brian G R Neville; Alan Connelly
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2003-08-22       Impact factor: 13.501

Review 8.  Fever, genes, and epilepsy.

Authors:  Stéphanie Baulac; Isabelle Gourfinkel-An; Rima Nabbout; Gilles Huberfeld; Jose Serratosa; Eric Leguern; Michel Baulac
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9.  Febrile seizures and mesial temporal sclerosis: No association in a long-term follow-up study.

Authors:  R Tarkka; E Pääkkö; J Pyhtinen; M Uhari; H Rantala
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2003-01-28       Impact factor: 9.910

10.  Magnetic resonance imaging findings within 5 days of status epilepticus in childhood.

Authors:  Rod C Scott; D G Gadian; M D King; W K Chong; T C Cox; B G R Neville; A Connelly
Journal:  Brain       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 13.501

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  18 in total

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3.  Coordination of hippocampal theta and gamma oscillations relative to spatial active avoidance reflects cognitive outcome after febrile status epilepticus.

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Review 4.  Concise Review: Prospects of Bone Marrow Mononuclear Cells and Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Treating Status Epilepticus and Chronic Epilepsy.

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Review 5.  What are the effects of prolonged seizures in the brain?

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6.  Cognitive impairment following experimental febrile seizures is determined by sex and seizure duration.

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7.  The Effects of Amiloride on Seizure Activity, Cognitive Deficits and Seizure-Induced Neurogenesis in a Novel Rat Model of Febrile Seizures.

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Journal:  Neurochem Res       Date:  2015-12-23       Impact factor: 3.996

8.  Temporal Coordination of Hippocampal Neurons Reflects Cognitive Outcome Post-febrile Status Epilepticus.

Authors:  Jeremy M Barry; Sophie Sakkaki; Sylvain J Barriere; Katelin P Patterson; Pierre Pascal Lenck-Santini; Rod C Scott; Tallie Z Baram; Gregory L Holmes
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9.  Prolonged febrile seizures cause reversible reductions in white matter integrity.

Authors:  M Yoong; K Seunarine; M Martinos; R F Chin; C A Clark; R C Scott
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10.  Repeated febrile convulsions impair hippocampal neurons and cause synaptic damage in immature rats: neuroprotective effect of fructose-1,6-diphosphate.

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