| Literature DB >> 27186225 |
Abstract
Cognitive impairment associated with childhood-onset epilepsy is an important consequence in the developing brain owing to its negative effects on neurodevelopmental and social outcomes. While the cause of cognitive impairment in epilepsy appears to be multifactorial, epilepsy-related factors such as type of epilepsy and underlying etiology, age at onset, frequency of seizures, duration of epilepsy, and its treatment are considered important. In recent studies, antecedent cognitive impairment before the first recognized seizure and microstructural and functional alteration of the brain at onset of epilepsy suggest the presence of a common neurobiological mechanism between epilepsy and cognitive comorbidity. However, the overall impact of cognitive comorbidity in children with epilepsy and the independent contribution of each of these factors to cognitive impairment have not been clearly delineated. This review article focuses on the significant contributors to cognitive impairment in children with epilepsy.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Cognition; Epilepsy; Seizure
Year: 2016 PMID: 27186225 PMCID: PMC4865638 DOI: 10.3345/kjp.2016.59.4.155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Pediatr ISSN: 1738-1061
Cognitive assessment tools in children with epilepsy
| Test name | Age range | Functions assessed/subscales |
|---|---|---|
| Bayley Scales of Infant Development III | 1–42 mo | Motor scale, mental scale, behavioral rating scale |
| Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence III | 3–7 yr | Verbal scale, performance scale |
| Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale (5th ed) | 2–19 yr | Composite IQ score |
| Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children II | 3–13 yr | Sequential processing scale, simultaneous processing scale, achievement scale |
| Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-IV) | 6–17 yr | Verbal scale, performance scale, full scale, verbal comprehension index, Perceptual organization index, freedom of distractibility index |
| Basic test of memory and learning | 6–12 yr | Memory, learning |
| ADHD Diagnostic System | 5–19 yr | Attention |
IQ, intelligence quotient; ADHD, attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder.
Childhood epilepsy syndromes with an indication of age of onset, duration of epilepsy, prognosis of epilepsy, and cognitive function
| Specific syndrome | Age at onset | Age at remission/prognosis | Cognitive function |
|---|---|---|---|
| Benign focal epilepsies in childhood | |||
| Benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes | 3–13 yr | 16 yr/good | Normal or mildly subnormal IQ |
| Idiopathic occipital epilepsy | 2–8 yr; 6–17 yr | 12 yr or earlier/good | Learning difficulties |
| Inattention, hyperactivity, language disability | |||
| Cryptogenic or symptomatic focal epilepsies | |||
| Frontal lobe epilepsy | Childhood | Unclear/variable | Normal or mildly subnormal IQ |
| Impairment of executive function | |||
| Inattention, hyperactivity | |||
| Temporal lobe epilepsy | School age or earlier | Long-standing/variable | Memory impairment |
| Impairment of executive function | |||
| Rasmussen syndrome | 6–12 yr | Progressive/ominous | Progressive cognitive decline |
| Hemiconvulsion-hemiplegia syndrome | 1–5y r | Chronic/severe | Progressive cognitive decline |
| Idiopathic generalized epilepsies | |||
| Benign myoclonic epilepsy in infancy | 3 mo–3 yr | 3–5 yr/variable | Normal or mildly subnormal IQ |
| Learning difficulties | |||
| Epilepsy with myoclonic astatic seizures | 3–5 yr | Variable/variable | Normal or cognitive impairment |
| Childhood absence epilepsy | 5–6 yr | 10–12 yr/good | Normal or mildly subnormal IQ |
| Inattention, memory impairment | |||
| Deficit of visuospatial skill | |||
| Language disability | |||
| Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy | 12–18 yr | Usually lifelong/good | Normal or mildly subnormal IQ |
| Inattention, hyperactivity | |||
| Epileptic encephalopathies | Memory impairment, language disability | ||
| Early infantile epileptic encephalopathy (Ohtahara syndrome) | Newborn–infant | No remission/ominous | Severe psychomotor retardation |
| Infantile spasms (West syndrome) | Infant | Variable/variable | Severe intellectual disability |
| Severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (Dravet syndrome) | Infant | No remission/severe | Progressive cognitive decline |
| Lennox-Gastaut syndrome | 3–10 yr | No remission/severe | Severe intellectual disability |
| Landau-Kleffner syndrome | 3–6 yr | 8–12 yr/guarded | Regression of language |
| Epilepsy with continuous spike waves during slow-wave sleep | 4–7 yr | 8–12 yr/guarded | Expressive aphasia, regression of global skills |
IQ, intelligence quotient.
Adapted from Guerrini R. Lancet 2006;367:499-524100).
Summary of cognitive impact of antiepileptic drugs in children
| Antiepileptic drug | Impairment or improvement | Area of cognitive impairment or improvement |
|---|---|---|
| Phenobarbital | ↓↓↓ | Memory and attention |
| Phenytoin | ↓ | Slowing of mental speed at high dosing |
| Ethosuximide | ↔ | |
| Carbamazepine | ↔/↓ | Probably only an effect with high dosing |
| Valproic acid | ↔ | Impaired cognition in hyperammonemia |
| Topiramate | ↓↓↓ | Attention, memory, and language function |
| Lamotrigine | ↑ | Cognitive enhancing effect on attention |
| Clobazam | ↔ | |
| Levetiracetam | ↔ | |
| Oxcarbazepine | ↔/↑ | Improvement of attention |
| Zonisamide | ↓ | Memory and language function |
| Gabapentin | No information in children | (No serious cognitive effect in adult) |
| Vigabatrin | ↔ | |
| Rufinamide | No information in children | (No serious cognitive effect in adult) |
| Lacosamide | No information in children | (No serious cognitive effect in adult) |
↓, mild impairment; ↓↓, moderate impairment; ↓↓↓, severe impairment; ↑, mild improvement; ↑↑, moderate improvement; ↑↑↑, profound improvement; ↔, no impairment or improvement.