Volume 46, Issue 5 pp. 704-708

Hippocampal Sclerosis in Severe Myoclonic Epilepsy in Infancy: A Retrospective MRI Study

Zsuzsanna Siegler

Zsuzsanna Siegler

Epilepsy Center, Bethesda Children's Hospital

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Peter Barsi

Peter Barsi

Department of Radiology, National Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology, Budapest

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Magdolna Neuwirth

Magdolna Neuwirth

Epilepsy Center, Bethesda Children's Hospital

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Judit Jerney

Judit Jerney

Epilepsy Center, Heim Pál Children's Hospital, Budapest, Hungary

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Maria Kassay

Maria Kassay

Epilepsy Center, Heim Pál Children's Hospital, Budapest, Hungary

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Jozsef Janszky

Jozsef Janszky

Department of Neurology, University of Pécs, Pécs

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Eva Paraicz

Eva Paraicz

Epilepsy Center, Bethesda Children's Hospital

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Marta Hegyi

Marta Hegyi

Epilepsy Center, Bethesda Children's Hospital

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Andras Fogarasi

Andras Fogarasi

Epilepsy Center, Bethesda Children's Hospital

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First published: 27 April 2005
Citations: 45
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. A. Fogarasi at Epilepsy Center, Bethesda Children's Hospital, H-1146 Budapest, Bethesda Street 3, Hungary. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Summary: Purpose: Severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (SMEI; Dravet's syndrome) is a malignant epilepsy syndrome characterized by early prolonged febrile convulsions (PFCs) with secondary psychomotor delay and a variety of therapy-resistant seizures. Although the initial symptoms are repeated PFCs, the MRI performed at the onset of disease shows no hippocampal structural abnormalities. We aimed to assess clinical and serial MRI data of patients with SMEI with a special attention to the temporomedial structures. To our knowledge, this is the first systematic MRI study in this disease.

Methods: Clinical and MRI data of all SMEI patients treated in our hospitals between 1996 and 2004 were reviewed.

Results: Twenty-eight MRIs from 14 children (one to four images/patient) were included. Age at disease onset was between 3 and 9 months; age at initial MRI was 5 months to 13 years. Ten of 14 patients showed hippocampal sclerosis (HS) during the course of the disease (nine unilateral, one bilateral). Six of these 10 had a normal initial MRI. Age at the first verified HS was between 14 months and 13 years. Neither complex partial seizures nor anterior temporal irritative zone was recorded in these children.

Conclusions: After initially normal structures, in most patients with SMEI, HS develops several months or years after the first PFC. These data support the hypothesis that PFC might be responsible for HS, but other factors and individual sensitivity should play a role in this process.

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