Epileptic encephalopathies are severe brain disorders with the epileptic component contributing to the worsening of cognitive and behavioral manifestations. Acquired epileptic aphasia (Landau-Kleffner syndrome, LKS) and continuous spike and waves during slow-wave sleep syndrome (CSWSS) represent rare and closely related childhood focal epileptic encephalopathies of unknown etiology. They show electroclinical overlap with rolandic epilepsy (the most frequent childhood focal epilepsy) and can be viewed as different clinical expressions of a single pathological entity situated at the crossroads of epileptic, speech, language, cognitive and behavioral disorders. Here we demonstrate that about 20% of cases of LKS, CSWSS and electroclinically atypical rolandic epilepsy often associated with speech impairment can have a genetic origin sustained by de novo or inherited mutations in the GRIN2A gene (encoding the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor α2 subunit, GluN2A). The identification of GRIN2A as a major gene for these epileptic encephalopathies provides crucial insights into the underlying pathophysiology.
Aims: Magnetic resonance imaging is of paramount importance in the presurgical evaluation of drug resistant epilepsy. Detection of a potentially epileptogenic lesion significantly improves seizure outcome after surgery. To optimize the detection of subtle lesions, MRI post‐processing techniques may be of essential help. Methods: In this study, we aimed to evaluate the detection rate of the voxel‐based morphometric analysis program (MAP) in a prospective trial. We aimed to study the MAP+ findings in terms of their clinical value in the decision‐making process of the presurgical evaluation. Results: We included, prospectively, 21 patients who had negative MRI by visual analysis. In a first step, results of the conventional non‐invasive presurgical evaluation were discussed, blinded to the MAP results, in multidisciplinary patient management conferences to determine the possible seizure onset zone and to set surgical or invasive evaluation plans. Thereafter, MAP results were presented, and the change of initial clinical plan was recorded. All MAP detections were reaffirmed by a neuroradiologist with epilepsy expertise. For the 21 patients included, mean age at the time of patient management conference was 26 years (SD 15 +/‐ years, range: 5–54 years). In total, 4/21 had temporal lobe epilepsy and 17/21 had extra‐temporal lobe epilepsy. MAP was positive in 10/21 (47%) patients and in 6/10 (60%) a diagnosis of focal cortical dysplasia was confirmed after neuroradiologist review, corresponding to a 28% detection rate. MAP+ findings had a clear impact on the initial management in 7/10 patients (7/21, 33% of all patients), which included an adaptation of the intracranial EEG plan (6/7 patients), or the decision to proceed directly to surgery (1/7 patients). Conclusion: MRI post‐processing using the MAP method yielded an increased detection rate of 28% for subtle dysplastic lesions in a prospective cohort of MRI‐negative patients, indicating its potential value in epilepsy presurgical evaluation.
In this report, we review the pharmacological and non-pharmacological treatments of the different absence seizure types as recently recognized by the International League Against Epilepsy: typical absences, atypical absences, myoclonic absences, and eyelid myoclonia with absences. Overall, valproate and ethosuximide remain the principal anti-absence drugs. Typical absence seizures exhibit a specific electroclinical semiology, pathophysiology, and pharmacological response profile. A large-scale comparative study has recently confirmed the key role of ethosuximide in the treatment of childhood absence epilepsy, more than 50 years after its introduction. No new antiepileptic drug has proven major efficacy against typical absences. Of the medications under development, brivaracetam might be an efficacious anti-absence drug. Some experimental drugs also show efficacy in animal models of typical absence seizures. The treatment of other absence seizure types is not supported with a high level of evidence. Rufinamide appears to be the most promising new antiepileptic drug for atypical absences and possibly for myoclonic absences. The efficacy of vagal nerve stimulation should be further evaluated for atypical absences. Levetiracetam appears to display a particular efficacy in eyelid myoclonia with absences. Finally, it is important to remember that the majority of antiepileptic drugs, whether they be old or new, may aggravate typical and atypical absence seizures.
Summary:Purpose: Language-induced epilepsy involves seizure precipitation by speaking, reading, and writing. Seizures are similar to those of reading epilepsy (RE). The nosologic position of language-induced epilepsy is not clear. We performed a clinical and neurophysiological study in a multigenerational family with the association of idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE) with ictal stuttering as a manifestation of reflex languageinduced epilepsy.Methods: Nine members on three generations were studied. All patients underwent video-polygraphic EEG recordings (awake and during sleep). A standardized protocol was applied to test the effect of language and non-language-related tasks.Results: Six patients presented language-induced jaw jerking that mimicked stuttering and corresponded to focal myoclonus involving facial muscles. This was associated with an IGE phenotype in four of these patients. Focal EEG spikes were found in all six patients by visual analysis and/or back-averaging techniques. The focal spikes were either asymptomatic (when followed by a slow wave) or symptomatic of facial myoclonia (when isolated). Levetiracetam, used as add-on or monotherapy in four patients, suppressed ictal stuttering. One additional case only had a phenotype of IGE without focal features.Conclusions: This family study demonstrates the phenotypic heterogeneity of the association of IGE phenotype with ictal stuttering (language-related reflex seizure). Our data suggest that this particular form of reflex epilepsy related to language has more similarities with generalized epilepsies than with focal ones. Neurophysiological investigations should be performed more systematically in patients with acquired stuttering, especially if there is family history of IGE.
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