SUMMARYPurpose: Evidence for a poor psychiatric, social, and vocational adult outcome in childhood absence epilepsy (CAE) suggests long-term unmet mental health, social, and vocational needs. This cross-sectional study examined behavioral/emotional, cognitive, and linguistic comorbidities as well as their correlates in children with CAE. Methods: Sixty-nine CAE children aged 9.6 (SD ¼ 2.49) years and 103 age-and gender-matched normal children had semistructured psychiatric interviews, as well as cognitive and linguistic testing. Parents provided demographic, seizure-related, and behavioral information on their children through a semi-structured psychiatric interview and the child behavior checklist (CBCL). Results: Compared to the normal group, 25% of the CAE children had subtle cognitive deficits, 43% linguistic difficulties, 61% a psychiatric diagnosis, particularly attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and anxiety disorders, and 30% clinically relevant CBCL broad band scores. The most frequent CBCL narrow band factor scores in the clinical/borderline range were attention and somatic complaints, followed by social and thought problems. Duration of illness, seizure frequency, and antiepileptic drug (AED) treatment were related to the severity of the cognitive, linguistic, and psychiatric comorbidities. Only 23% of the CAE subjects had intervention for these problems. Conclusions: The high rate of impaired behavior, emotions, cognition, and language and low intervention rate should alert clinicians to the need for early identification and treatment of children with CAE, particularly those with longer duration of illness, uncontrolled seizures, and AED treatment.
Objective: Patients with cortical dysplasia (CD) are difficult to treat because the MRI abnormality may be undetectable. This study determined whether fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-PET/MRI coregistration enhanced the recognition of CD in epilepsy surgery patients. UCLA MRI identified CD in 78% of patients, and 37% of type I CD cases had normal UCLA scans. EEG and neuroimaging findings were concordant in 52% of type I CD patients, compared with 89% of type II CD patients. FDG-PET scans were positive in 71% of CD cases, and type I CD patients had less hypometabolism compared with type II CD patients. Postoperative seizure freedom occurred in 82% of patients, without differences between type I and type II CD cases. Cortical dysplasia (CD), first described in 1971, 1 is the most common malformation of cortical development identified in surgically treated patients with therapy-resistant epilepsy. Methods: Conclusions:2,3 The histopathology of CD is classified into mild Palmini type I and severe Palmini type II.4,5 Type I CD is characterized by cortical dyslamination and columnar disorganization often associated with excessive subcortical white matter neurons. Type II CD shows cortical disorganization plus abnormal dysmorphic or cytomegalic neurons with or without balloon cells. 6 In the past decade, improvements in MRI have increased awareness that CD is a frequent substrate causing epilepsy. This is especially true for patients with type II CD in whom structural MRI and functional neuroimaging often identify the lesion. 7-10 However, patients with type I CD are a challenge in that they often have negative MRI scans, making surgical treatment difficult without knowing the exact location and borders necessary for complete lesion removal.
Summary:Purpose: Children with tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) benefit from excisional surgery if seizures can be localized to a single tuber. We evaluated the role of noninvasive studies to localize the epileptogenic tuberhegion (ET/R) and the outcome of focal resection.Methods: We identified 21 children with TSC, ages 3 months to 15 years (mean 4.8 years). All had video-(electroencephalogram) EEG and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, and 18 also had ictal single photon emission-computed tomography (SPECT) studies. An ET/R was localized in 17 patients. Thirteen patients underwent resection guided by intraoperative electrocorticography (n = 7) or subdural monitoring (n = 6).Results: Interictal EEG revealed a principal spike focus (PSF) that corresponded to the ET/R in 14 children. In seven, PSFs occurred in rhythmic runs. PSFs were not observed remote from the ET/R. Focal polymorphic slowing and attenuation occurred in the region of the PSF in 1 I patients. Sixteen patients demonstrated an ictal focus corresponding to the ET/R. Ictal SPECT revealed focal hyperperfusion correlating with the ET/R in 10 patients. Although the MRIs in all children revealed multiple tubers, the E T R corresponded to a large discrete tuber in 8 patients and a calcified tuber in 13 patients. Patchy calcified tubers were also seen elsewhere in six patients. At a mean follow-up of 26 months, 9 of the 13 children who underwent surgery were seizure-free, one had greater than 75% reduction in seizures, two were unchanged, and one was lost to follow-up. New seizures developed in one child from a contralateral tuber.Conclusions: Surgical resection of an ET/R alleviates seizures in most children with TSC and intractable epilepsy. The scalp EEG and MRI help define the ET/R and improve case selection when ictal SPECT is nonlocalizing.
Summary: Purpose: This study examined the relation between psychiatric diagnosis and mental health services in children with epilepsy and the associated demographic, cognitive, linguistic, behavioral, and seizure‐related variables. Methods: The Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (K‐SADS), the Child Behavior Checklist, the Test of Language Development, and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children–Revised (WISC‐R) were administered to 114 children, aged 5 to 16 years, with either complex partial seizures (CPS) or primary generalized with absence (PGE, petit mal). A Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM‐IV) diagnosis and information regarding mental health services were derived from the K‐SADS. Results: Although ∼60% of the subjects had a DSM‐IV psychiatric diagnosis, >60% received no mental health treatment. Absence of mental health care was associated with younger age, less parental education, limited number of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs; i.e., one or none), and higher verbal IQ. In addition, children with PGE and a single psychiatric diagnosis were less likely to have a history of mental health treatment. Conclusions: This is the first study to demonstrate unmet mental health need in a large sample of children with CPS and PGE. The study's findings suggest that parents and clinicians should be aware of the mental health needs of children with epilepsy, particularly if they have one or more of the identified risk factors.
Children undergoing surgery with infant-onset epilepsy were classified into those with medically refractory infantile spasms (IS), successfully treated IS, and no IS history, and the groups were compared for pre- and postsurgery clinical and Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale (VABS) developmental quotients (DQ). Children without an IS history were older at surgery and had longer epilepsy durations than those with IS despite similar substrates, surgeries, and seizure frequencies. In all groups, better postsurgery VABS-DQ scores were associated with early surgical intervention indicating that infant-onset epilepsy patients with or without IS are at risk for seizure-induced encephalopathy.
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