Voltage gated sodium channels are essential for excitability of skeletal muscle fibres and neurones. An increasing number of disabling or fatal paediatric neurological disorders linked to mutations of voltage gated sodium channel genes are recognised. Muscle phenotypes include episodic paralysis, myotonia, neonatal hypotonia, respiratory compromise, laryngospasm/stridor, congenital myasthenia and myopathy. Recent evidence suggests a possible link between sodium channel dysfunction and sudden infant death. Increasingly recognised brain sodium channelopathy phenotypes include several epilepsy disorders and complex encephalopathies. Together these early onset muscle and brain phenotypes have a significant morbidity and an appreciable mortality rate but there have been significant advances in understanding the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying them and these have helped to identify effective targeted therapies. The availability of effective treatments underlines the importance of increasing clinical awareness and the need to achieve a precise genetic diagnosis. Here, we describe the expanded range of phenotypes of muscle and brain sodium channelopathies and the underlying knowledge regarding mechanisms of sodium channel dysfunction. We outline a diagnostic approach and review the available treatment options.