EuroEPINOMICS (European Science Foundation through national funding organisations), Epicure and EpiPGX (Sixth Framework Programme and Seventh Framework Programme of the European Commission), Research Unit FOR2715 (German Research Foundation and Luxembourg National Research Fund).
It appears that old (phenobarbital, valproate and carbamazepine) and new antiepileptic drugs (oxcarbazepine and levetiracetam) have similar efficacy and tolerability profiles. Institutional ethic number is 28.3.2013/14.
Dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) is a non-invasive, rapid, accurate and highly reproducible method for the assessment of antiepileptic drug (AED)-induced osteopenia in epileptic children. In this study, we investigated bone mineral density (BMD) using DEXA in 56 epileptic children receiving long-term AED treatment for at least 2 years. All children received AED monotherapy or polytherapy plus a standard vitamin D3 supplement (400 U/day). BMD measurements were made from lumbar spine (L2-L4) regions. Age- and sex-specific BMD SD scores were calculated for each child. Osteopenia was defined as SD scores less than -1.5. There was no significant difference in mean BMD values between epileptic children receiving monotherapy or polytherapy. The results were also compared to the age- and sex-specific BMD SD scores obtained from healthy Turkish children. Only three patients (5%) receiving AED therapy had a BMD SD score less than -1.5. This rate is relatively lower than the rates of previous studies conducted on ambulatory children on long-term AED treatment without vitamin D3 supplementation.
We describe the clinical features of Robinow syndrome in the children of four Turkish couples. All the patients had cardinal features of this condition, such as short stature, frontal bossing, hypertelorism, short upturned nose with anteverted nares, micrognathia, mesomelic shortening of the forearms, vertebral and costal anomalies and hypoplastic genitalia. In contrast to reports in the literature, one patient showed extensive webbing of the toes and epigastric hernia. Parental consanguinity was present in two of the four cases. To our knowledge, at least 80 cases have been reported in the literature to date, including 19 cases born to Turkish couples in addition to our four cases. The evidence suggests that the frequency of Robinow syndrome is relatively higher in Turkey than in other areas of the world.
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