Volume 50, Issue s8 pp. 3-9

Dravet syndrome: From electroclinical characteristics to molecular biology

Alexis Arzimanoglou

Alexis Arzimanoglou

Epilepsy, Sleep and Pediatric Neurophysiology Department, Institute for Children and Adolescents with Epilepsy – IDEE, University Hospitals of Lyon (HCL) and Inserm U821, Lyon, France

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First published: 12 August 2009
Citations: 28
Address correspondence to Alexis Arzimanoglou, Associate Professor of Neurology and Child Neurology, Head Institute for children and adolescents with epilepsy IDEE, 59 Boulevard Pinel, 69677 Lyon, France. E-mail: [email protected]

Summary

The onset of Dravet syndrome typically occurs within the first year, with prolonged, generalized, or unilateral clonic seizures triggered by fever. In the early stages, other types of refractory seizures usually present that include myoclonic seizures, atypical absences, and partial seizures. Electroencephalography (EEG) findings are not pathognomonic, and signs of cognitive arrest or deterioration progressively appear. In contrast, in adults, myoclonic seizures, atypical absences, and focal seizures tend to disappear, and short tonic–clonic seizures, often associating a focal component, persist particularly during sleep. The sensitivity to fever persists into adulthood, and although mental deterioration occurs in infancy, usually leaving patients with severe mental impairment, further deterioration does not occur. The identification of genes associated with Dravet syndrome and related syndromes hints at the complexity of the etiology of such epilepsies. Identifying SCN1A mutations has become useful as a means to support an early diagnosis of Dravet syndrome, to benefit counseling, and to avoid use of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) that may have adverse effects. However, the defining characteristics of seizure type and EEG patterns initially identified by Dravet remain fundamental to diagnosis.

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