Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic Spasms

Objective: The etiology and outcome of status epilepticus with continuous epileptic spasms have not been fully understood; and only rare cases have been reported in the literature. Here, we described 11 children, who manifested continuous epileptic spasms with various etiologies and different outcom...

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Main Authors: Jianxiang Liao, Tieshuan Huang, Myriam Srour, Yuhan Xiao, Yan Chen, Sufang Lin, Li Chen, Yan Hu, Lina Men, Jialun Wen, Bing Li, Feiqiu Wen, Lan Xiong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Neurology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2020.00065/full
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spelling doaj-d924ca5f73814f30a5f6e4e05ba82c1c2020-11-25T02:26:54ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neurology1664-22952020-02-011110.3389/fneur.2020.00065488550Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic SpasmsJianxiang Liao0Tieshuan Huang1Myriam Srour2Yuhan Xiao3Yan Chen4Sufang Lin5Li Chen6Yan Hu7Lina Men8Jialun Wen9Bing Li10Feiqiu Wen11Lan Xiong12Shenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaMontreal Children's Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, QC, CanadaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaShenzhen Children's Hospital Affiliated With China Medical University, Shenzhen, ChinaMontreal Neurological Institute and Hospital, McGill University, Montreal, QC, CanadaObjective: The etiology and outcome of status epilepticus with continuous epileptic spasms have not been fully understood; and only rare cases have been reported in the literature. Here, we described 11 children, who manifested continuous epileptic spasms with various etiologies and different outcomes.Methods: This is a case series study designed to systematically review the charts, video-electroencephalography (video-EEG), magnetic resonance images, and longitudinal follow-up of patients who presented continuous epileptic spasms lasting more than 30 min.Results: Median age at onset was 2 years old, ranging from 2 months to 5.6 years. The etiology of continuous epileptic spasms for these 11 cases consisted of not only some known electro-clinical epilepsy syndromes like West Syndrome and Ohtahara Syndrome, but also secondary symptomatic continuous epileptic spasms, caused by acute encephalitis or encephalopathy, which extends the etiological spectrum of continuous epileptic spasms. The most characteristic feature of these 11 cases was prolonged epileptic spasms, lasting for a median of 13.00 days (95% CI: 7.26–128.22 days). The interictal EEG findings typically manifested as hypsarrhythmia or its variants, including burst suppression. Hospital stays were much longer in acute symptomatic cases than in primary epileptic syndromic cases (59.67 ± 50.82 vs. 15.00 ± 1.41 days). However, the long-term outcomes were extremely poor in the patients with defined electro-clinical epilepsy syndromes, including severe motor and intellectual developmental deficits (follow-up of 4.94 ± 1.56 years), despite early diagnosis and treatment. Continuous epileptic spasms were refractory to corticosteroids, immuno-modulation or immunosuppressive therapies, and ketogenic diet.Conclusion: Continuous epileptic spasms were associated with severe brain impairments in patients with electro-clinical syndromes; and required long hospital stays in patients with acute symptomatic causes. We suggest to include continuous epileptic spasms in the international classification of status epilepticus, as a special form. Further investigations are required to better recognize this condition, better understand the etiology, as well as to explore more effective treatments to improve outcomes.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2020.00065/fullstatus epilepticusepilepsycontinuous epileptic spasmselectroencephalogramselectro-clinical epilepsy syndromevideo-EEG
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jianxiang Liao
Tieshuan Huang
Myriam Srour
Yuhan Xiao
Yan Chen
Sufang Lin
Li Chen
Yan Hu
Lina Men
Jialun Wen
Bing Li
Feiqiu Wen
Lan Xiong
spellingShingle Jianxiang Liao
Tieshuan Huang
Myriam Srour
Yuhan Xiao
Yan Chen
Sufang Lin
Li Chen
Yan Hu
Lina Men
Jialun Wen
Bing Li
Feiqiu Wen
Lan Xiong
Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic Spasms
Frontiers in Neurology
status epilepticus
epilepsy
continuous epileptic spasms
electroencephalograms
electro-clinical epilepsy syndrome
video-EEG
author_facet Jianxiang Liao
Tieshuan Huang
Myriam Srour
Yuhan Xiao
Yan Chen
Sufang Lin
Li Chen
Yan Hu
Lina Men
Jialun Wen
Bing Li
Feiqiu Wen
Lan Xiong
author_sort Jianxiang Liao
title Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic Spasms
title_short Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic Spasms
title_full Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic Spasms
title_fullStr Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic Spasms
title_full_unstemmed Status Epilepticus Manifested as Continuous Epileptic Spasms
title_sort status epilepticus manifested as continuous epileptic spasms
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neurology
issn 1664-2295
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Objective: The etiology and outcome of status epilepticus with continuous epileptic spasms have not been fully understood; and only rare cases have been reported in the literature. Here, we described 11 children, who manifested continuous epileptic spasms with various etiologies and different outcomes.Methods: This is a case series study designed to systematically review the charts, video-electroencephalography (video-EEG), magnetic resonance images, and longitudinal follow-up of patients who presented continuous epileptic spasms lasting more than 30 min.Results: Median age at onset was 2 years old, ranging from 2 months to 5.6 years. The etiology of continuous epileptic spasms for these 11 cases consisted of not only some known electro-clinical epilepsy syndromes like West Syndrome and Ohtahara Syndrome, but also secondary symptomatic continuous epileptic spasms, caused by acute encephalitis or encephalopathy, which extends the etiological spectrum of continuous epileptic spasms. The most characteristic feature of these 11 cases was prolonged epileptic spasms, lasting for a median of 13.00 days (95% CI: 7.26–128.22 days). The interictal EEG findings typically manifested as hypsarrhythmia or its variants, including burst suppression. Hospital stays were much longer in acute symptomatic cases than in primary epileptic syndromic cases (59.67 ± 50.82 vs. 15.00 ± 1.41 days). However, the long-term outcomes were extremely poor in the patients with defined electro-clinical epilepsy syndromes, including severe motor and intellectual developmental deficits (follow-up of 4.94 ± 1.56 years), despite early diagnosis and treatment. Continuous epileptic spasms were refractory to corticosteroids, immuno-modulation or immunosuppressive therapies, and ketogenic diet.Conclusion: Continuous epileptic spasms were associated with severe brain impairments in patients with electro-clinical syndromes; and required long hospital stays in patients with acute symptomatic causes. We suggest to include continuous epileptic spasms in the international classification of status epilepticus, as a special form. Further investigations are required to better recognize this condition, better understand the etiology, as well as to explore more effective treatments to improve outcomes.
topic status epilepticus
epilepsy
continuous epileptic spasms
electroencephalograms
electro-clinical epilepsy syndrome
video-EEG
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fneur.2020.00065/full
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