| Literature DB >> 23984056 |
Satish Agadi1, Michael M Quach, Zulfi Haneef.
Abstract
Untreated epileptic encephalopathies in children may potentially have disastrous outcomes. Treatment with antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) often may not control the seizures, and even if they do, this measure is only symptomatic and not specific. It is especially valuable to identify potential underlying conditions that have specific treatments. Only a few conditions have definitive treatments that can potentially modify the natural course of disease. In this paper, we discuss the few such conditions that are responsive to vitamin or vitamin derivatives.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23984056 PMCID: PMC3745849 DOI: 10.1155/2013/510529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epilepsy Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1348
Summary of clinical, biochemical, neurophysiological findings with treatment and prognosis of vitamin responsive epileptic encephalopathies in children.
| Usual age of onset | Etiology | Biochemical abnormalities | Type of epilepsy | EEG findings | Treatment | Prognosis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pyridoxine dependent epilepsy | 0–2 months | ALDH7A1 mutation | Elevated CSF/urine alpha aminoadipic semialdehyde; elevated CSF/plasma pipecolic acid | Focal or generalized, myoclonic, epileptic spasms | Normal; Mild background slowing; generalized and multifocal epileptiform activities; hypsarrythmia | Pyridoxine (IV followed by oral) | Variable, dependent on early treatment with pyridoxine |
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| Pyridoxal 5-phosphate dependent epilepsy | Early neonatal | PNPO mutation | Hypoglycemia and lactic acidosis; elevated plasma glycine and threonine; elevated CSF L-Dopa and 3-methoxytyrosine; decreased CSF homovanillic acid and 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid | Multifocal myoclonic-tonic | Multifocal sharp waves; Burst suppression | Pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (Oral) | High rate of mortality and poor neurocognitive outcome |
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| Autoimmune folate antibody related epilepsy | ~4 months | Folate antibody mediated | Decreased CSF 5-methyltetrahydrofolate; serum folate antibodies | Epileptic spasms, myoclonic-astatic seizures, absence, generalized tonic clonic | Mild diffuse slowing; multifocal spikes, hypsarrythmia, electrical status epilepticus of sleep | Folinic acid (oral) | Favorable outcome if treated before 6 years of age; incomplete neurological recovery if treated later |
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| FOLR1 mutation related epilepsy | 4–8 years | FOLR1 mutation | Decreased CSF 5-methyltetrahydrofolate | Myoclonic-astatic, myoclonic, generalized tonic clonic | Diffuse slowing with multifocal spikes | Folinic acid (oral) | Favorable outcome if treated before 6 years of age; incomplete neurological recovery if treated later |
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| Biotinidase deficiency | 2–5 months (Late onset adolescence to adulthood) | Biotinidase gene mutation | Decreased serum biotinidase; lactic acidosis; hyperammonemia; elevated 3-hydroxyisovalerate, 3-methylcrotonylglycine and methyl citrate; elevated CSF lactate and pyruvate | Generalized tonic clonic, myoclonic, partial seizures, infantile spasms | Normal; mild slowing; asynchrony, attenuated background; multifocal spikes; burst suppression; hypsarrythmia | Biotin (oral) | Improved with treatment |
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| B12 deficiency | Infantile | Dietary | Elevated urine methylmalonic acid | Focal or generalized, epileptic spasms | Generalized slowing; focal or generalized epileptic discharges; hypsarrythmia | Hydroxycobalamin or cyanocobalamin (IM) | Preventable long-term sequelae with treatment |