2012
DOI: 10.1002/mds.25237
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Seizures in juvenile Huntington's disease: Frequency and characterization in a multicenter cohort

Abstract: Little is known about the epilepsy that often occurs in the juvenile form of Huntington's disease (HD), but is absent from the adult-onset form. The primary aim of this study was to characterize the seizures in juvenile HD (JHD) subjects with regard to frequency, semiology, defining EEG characteristics, and response to antiepileptic agents. A multicenter, retrospective cohort was identified by database query and/or chart review. Data on age of HD onset, primary HD manifestations, number of CAG repeats, the pre… Show more

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Cited by 72 publications
(74 citation statements)
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“…This subset of patients are afflicted by Juvenile HD (JHD), an early and more aggressive variant of the disease which uniquely features myoclonic seizures in 38% of patients (Cloud et al, 2012), which are refractory to standard anti-epileptic medications (Osborne et al, 1982; Landau and Cannard, 2003; Gonzalez-Alegre and Afifi, 2006). Therefore epilepsy is emerging as a major co-morbidity and unmet medical need of patients with JHD and yet little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying seizure incidence in this patient population.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This subset of patients are afflicted by Juvenile HD (JHD), an early and more aggressive variant of the disease which uniquely features myoclonic seizures in 38% of patients (Cloud et al, 2012), which are refractory to standard anti-epileptic medications (Osborne et al, 1982; Landau and Cannard, 2003; Gonzalez-Alegre and Afifi, 2006). Therefore epilepsy is emerging as a major co-morbidity and unmet medical need of patients with JHD and yet little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying seizure incidence in this patient population.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the age of rHD1, the imaging findings and progressive development of cognitive behavioral decline, especially seizures, this particular animal may parallel human juvenile onset HD (JHD) even only with a small expansion of polyglutamine (29Q) compared to normal rhesus macaque (10-11Q) at the HTT gene. JHD patients have motor symptom onset younger than age 21, with a higher incidence of seizures in very young onset cases and stiffness, parkinsonism, and dystonia outweighing chorea especially in very young onset cases [49-54]. Seizures are unusual in adult onset HD [49].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…JHD patients have motor symptom onset younger than age 21, with a higher incidence of seizures in very young onset cases and stiffness, parkinsonism, and dystonia outweighing chorea especially in very young onset cases [49-54]. Seizures are unusual in adult onset HD [49]. Imaging data in human JHD is very sparse, with caudate atrophy being the most consistent finding [55-58], which parallels with our findings that reduction in caudate volume was more profound compared to the putamen.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It is interesting to note that the presence of epilepsy in this patient groups her with the Mexican/Venezuelan/Argentinian phenotype rather than the Brazilian phenotype. These symptoms would be unlikely to occur in adult HD patients, although seizures are relatively common in juvenile HD presenting before the age of 10 [11]. Similarly the presentation in the mid 30s with chorea, difficulty suppressing head movements during saccades and breakdown of alternating eye movements would be entirely consistent with the expected course of disease for 48 CAG repeat huntingtin [12].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%