“…Presence of polyglucosans in neurons per se is possibly not the main factor leading to epilepsy, as neuronal PGBs are also found in patients with glycogen branching enzyme deficiency (glycogen storage disease type IV), which suffer from motor, sensory and autonomic deficits but not epilepsy (Robitaille et al, 1980). Inclusions of polyglucosans, named corpora amylacea in some old and new studies (for details on the nomenclature, see Cavanagh, 1999), have been frequently observed in cerebral astrocytes of patients suffering of several epileptic disorders and often correlated with seizure duration (Abel et al, 2010; Agari et al, 2012; Cherian et al, 2003; Chung and Horoupian, 1996; Das et al, 2011; Erdamar et al, 2000; Kakita et al, 2005; Kawamura et al, 2002; Nishio et al, 2001; Palmucci et al, 1982; Radhakrishnan et al, 2007; Radhakrishnan et al, 1999; Ribeiro Mde et al, 2003; Van Paesschen et al, 1997; Vanderhaeghen, 1971), although their occurrence has also been reported in various brain regions and even in other tissues either in the presence or in the absence of specific pathology (see Leel-Ossy, 1998). The aggregation of glycogen-like polymers is a complex and relatively unexplored phenomenon, which includes abnormal polyglucosans but also membrane-bound aggregates of normal β-glycogen (glycogenosomes) observed under various conditions such as lysosomal disorders and aging (Cavanagh and Jones, 2000).…”