SUMMARYPurposes: To describe the clinical spectrum and to evaluate the efficacy of different therapeutic agents in children with electrical status epilepticus in sleep (ESES). Methods: Clinical data of all patients with ESES (not including patients with Landau-Kleffner syndrome) in four pediatric neurology outpatient clinics were analyzed. Thirty patients with ESES had been treated between 1994 and 2007. Results: Eleven (37%) children had benign partial epilepsies of childhood, five (17%) had cerebral palsy, five (17%) had hydrocephalus, one (3%) had schizencephaly, one (3%) had prenatal parenchymal bleeding, and the etiology was unclear in seven (23%). The duration of ESES ranged between 2 and 60 months. The antiepileptic drugs that were found to be efficacious were: levetiracetam (41%), clobazam (31%), and sulthiame (17%). Valproic acid, lamotrigine, topiramate, and ethosuximide showed no efficacy. Steroids were efficacious in 65%; immunoglobulins were efficacious in 33%. High-dose diazepam was efficacious in 37%, but all the children had temporary response. Seventeen patients (57%) had cognitive deterioration, whereas the rest presented with regression in attention, speech, communication, and behavior. Fourteen children had permanent cognitive deficit. There was a significant correlation (p = 0.029) between the duration of ESES and residual intellectual deficit at follow-up. Conclusions: ESES reflects an evolution of benign partial epilepsy of childhood in more than onethird of the patients, whereas there is an underlying structural brain anomaly in another one-third. The most efficacious antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) are levetiracetam and clobazam. The duration of ESES correlated significantly with residual intellectual deficit at follow-up.
ABSTRACT. Objective. During the past 2 decades, celiac disease (CD) has been recognized as a multisystem autoimmune disorder. A growing body of distinct neurologic conditions such as cerebellar ataxia, epilepsy, myoclonic ataxia, chronic neuropathies, and dementia have been reported, mainly in middle-aged adults. There still are insufficient data on the association of CD with various neurologic disorders in children, adolescents, and young adults, including more common and "soft" neurologic conditions, such as headache, learning disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and tic disorders. The aim of the present study is to look for a broader spectrum of neurologic disorders in CD patients, most of them children or young adults.Methods. Patients with CD were asked to fill in a questionnaire regarding the presence of neurologic disorders or symptoms. Their medical charts were reviewed, and those who were reported as having neurologic manifestations underwent neurologic examination and brain imaging or electroencephalogram if required. Their neurologic data were compared with that of a control group matched for age and gender.Results. Patients with CD were more prone to develop neurologic disorders (51.4%) in comparison with control subjects (19.9%). These disorders include hypotonia, developmental delay, learning disorders and ADHD, headache, and cerebellar ataxia. Epileptic disorders were only marginally more common in CD. In contrast, no difference was found in the prevalence of tic disorders in both groups. Therapeutic benefit, with gluten-free diet, was demonstrated only in patients with transient infantile hypotonia and migraine headache.Conclusion. This study suggests that the variability of neurologic disorders that occur in CD is broader than previously reported and includes "softer" and more common neurologic disorders, such as chronic headache, developmental delay, hypotonia, and learning disorders or ADHD. Future longitudinal prospective studies might better define the full range of these neurologic disorders and their clinical response to a gluten-free diet. Pediatrics 2004;113:1672-1676; celiac disease, neurologic disorders, migraine, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, hypotonia.ABBREVIATIONS. CD, celiac disease; ADHD, attention-deficit/ hyperactivity disorder.A lthough in the past celiac disease (CD) was primarily considered to be a gluten enteropathy, during the past 2 decades, its clinical concept has been expanded, and it is now considered a multisystem autoimmune disorder, 1 with most of the patients being asymptomatic, oligosymptomatic, or present with extraintestinal manifestations. 2 Among these extraintestinal manifestations, there is a growing body of publications that report neurologic conditions that are associated with CD. 3-12 Although earlier studies reported neurologic complications in patients with classical gluten enteropathy, some recent studies report neurologic disorders in asymptomatic CD patients. 13,14 Most of the patients who have CD and were reported ...
NMDA receptor agonists have been used for many years to generate animal models of polymicrogyria, a malformation of cortical development. Fry et al. identify de novo GRIN1 mutations in eleven patients with severe bilateral polymicrogyria. Polymicrogyria-associated GRIN1 mutations cluster in specific protein domains and significantly alter NMDA receptor function.
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