We treated 116 children with ACTH or prednisone. Fifty-two had infantile spasms with hypsarhythmia, and 64 had other types of intractable seizures. ACTH completely controlled seizures in all patients with infantile spasms and hypsarhythmia and 74% of those with other types of seizures. Prednisone controlled 51% of patients with infantile spasms and none with other seizures. Serious side effects were minimal for both drugs, and recurrent seizures occurred in 40 to 50% of patients within 4 to 14 months after completion of therapy.
Fifteen children with infantile spasms and a hypsarrhythmic EEG defined by EEG-videotelemetry monitoring received a regimen of high-dose (150 IU/m2/d) ACTH for their seizures. We carried out an endocrinologic evaluation before and after initiation of the ACTH and conducted a time course study of plasma ACTH and cortisol levels after ACTH dosing. Spasms were controlled and the EEG normalized in 14 of the 15 children. Prior to starting ACTH therapy all the patients had normal prolactin, insulin, cortisol, and ACTH levels in plasma and normal thyroid function. Although the pattern of rise of ACTH levels in plasma after ACTH dosing was similar in all the children, there was great individual variation in the absolute concentrations. However, both the pattern of rise and absolute level of cortisol in plasma after ACTH was highly predictable in all patients. Plasma cortisol rose rapidly within 1 hour of ACTH administration and continued a slower rise for 12 to 24 hours after the ACTH dose. High-dose ACTH therapy seems quite effective in infantile spasms, perhaps because of a sustained high level of plasma cortisol. This sustained plateau of cortisol may be more effective in controlling infantile spasms than the pulse effect expected with oral steroids or lower doses of ACTH.
We studied 32 children with myasthenia gravis over a period of 12 years. The mean age at onset was 7.7 years. Presentation was ocular in 63% of patients. Another major disease in addition to myasthenia occurred in 44% of patients; a seizure disorder was the most commonly associated disease. Serum IgG antibody to nicotinic acetylcholine receptor was present in 53% of patients and did not correlate with severity of disease or treatment. Medical management was effective in 63%; thymectomy was effective in only 28%. We conclude that myasthenia gravis appears commonly before age 10 and is associated with the risk of some disease other than hyperthyroidism. Serum IgG nicotinic acetylcholine receptor antibody is present less frequently than in normal adults, and vigorous medical management should be attempted before thymectomy.
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