Epilepsy combined with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome: a literature review and description of clinical cases

Author:

Mironov M. B.1,Chebanenko N. V.2ORCID,Ayvazyan S. O.3ORCID,Vladimirova S. A.4,Osipova K. V.2,Burd S. G.5,Rubleva Yu. V.6,Krasilshchikova T. M.5,Bychenko V. G.7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medical Center for Pediatric Neurology and Pediatrics.

2. St. Luka’s Clinical Research Center for Children.

3. St. Luka’s Clinical Research Center for Children; St. Luka’s Clinical Research Center for Children.

4. Center of modern medicine.

5. Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University, Ministry of Health of Russia.

6. Pirogov Russian National Research Medical University, Ministry of Health of Russia; Federal Center for Cerebrovascular Pathology and Stroke .

7. Research Center for Obstetrics, Gynecology and Perinatology named after V. I. Kulakov of the Ministry of Health of Russian Federation.

Abstract

This article presents the anamnestic, clinical, electro-encephalographic and neuroimaging findings in 5 patients with epilepsy combined with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS). According to our data and the results of others, this combination has its specific characteristics. These include: a high incidence of epilepsy in patients with WHS (50-100% of cases), an early debut of seizures (mainly in the first year of life), fever-provoked seizures, and a variety of seizure types – focal paroxysms, bilateral tonic-clonic seizures, atypical febrile seizures, atypical absences and epileptic spasms. In addition, there may be frequent epileptic seizures tending toward status epilepticus, a slowing of the major EEG activity, a local EEG slowing (mainly in the posterior and bi-frontal areas), and regional / multiregional epileptiform activity. In more than 50% of cases, the diffuse peakwave activity is observed; the broad spectrum anti-epileptic drugs are highly efficient in 80% of cases. Based on this study, we propose recommendations for the management of patients with epilepsy combined with WHS.

Publisher

IRBIS

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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