Unilateral Eye Blinking Arising From the Ictal Ipsilateral Occipital Area

Author:

Falsaperla Raffaele1,Perciavalle Valentina2,Pavone Piero1,Praticò Andrea Domenico3,Elia Maurizio4,Ruggieri Martino2,Caraballo Roberto5,Striano Pasquale6

Affiliation:

1. Unit of Pediatrics and Pediatric Emergency “Costanza Gravina”, University Hospital “Vittorio Emanuele, Policlinic”, Catania, Italy

2. Department of Educational Sciences, University of Catania, Catania, Italy

3. Pediatric Clinic, University of Catania, Catania, Italy

4. IRCCS Oasi Maria Santissima, Troina, Italy

5. Department of Neurology, Juan P. Garrahan Pediatric Hospital, Buenos Aires, Argentina

6. Department of Neurosciences, Rehabilitation, Ophthalmology, Genetics, Maternal and Child Health, University of Genoa, G. Gaslini Institute, Genoa, Italy

Abstract

We report on an 18-month-old boy with unilateral left eye blinking as a single ictal manifestation without facial twitching. The clinical onset of this phenomenon was first recorded (as an occasional event) at age 3 months, and it was overlooked. By age 6 months, the child’s blinking increased to almost daily occurrence in clusters: during blinking the infant showed intact awareness and occasional jerks in the upper limbs and right leg. A video-electroencephalography (video-EEG) documented clinical correlation with a focal pattern arising from the left occipital region, and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed severe brain damage, consisting in poroencephalic hollows and increased spaces in the convexities involving a large area of the left cerebral hemisphere. The boy was prescribed sodium valproate (30 mg/kg/d), resulting in drastic reduction of his clinical seizures. Follow-up to his current age documented good general status, with persistent partial right hemilateral seizures. The blinking progressively disappeared, and is no longer recorded. The pathogenic hypotheses of the unilateral ictal blinking include involvement of the ipsilateral cerebral hemisphere and/or the cerebellar pathways. Review of previous reports of unilateral eye blinking, arising from the ictal ipsilateral brain, revealed that different damaged regions may give rise to blinking ictal phenomena, likely via the trigeminal fibres innervating the subdural intracranial structures and the pial vessels in the ipsilateral affected brain. The eye blinking in the present child represents a further example of an ictal phenomenon, which is predictive of the damaged brain region.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,General Medicine

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