Nadler B, Shevell M I
Department of Neurology/Neurosurgery, Montreal Children's Hospital-McGill University Health Centre, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Can J Neurol Sci. 2008 Jul;35(3):297-300.
Absence epilepsy is the most common primary generalized epilepsy syndrome encountered in pediatric practice. Treatment is pharmacologically specific and usually successful with a single medication. The objective of this study was to identify any clinical or electroencephalographic features at initial presentation in a consecutive cohort of children with absence epilepsy that may be associated with the need for a second medication.
A computerized pediatric neurology database (1991-2007 inclusive) was retrospectively searched for all patients with typical absence seizures, 3 Hz spike and wave on EEG and no apparent symptomatic etiology who were over the age of two years at seizure onset with at least one year of follow-up. All such children were then divided into two groups; a) those requiring a single medication for seizure control (Group 1), and b) those requiring two medications for seizure control despite optimal management with the initial medication as determined by serum drug monitoring (Group 2). Clinical and electrographic features evident at diagnosis were then contrasted between Group 1 and 2.
Seventy-five children with absence seizures were initially identified with 52 meeting the study's inclusion and none of the exclusion criteria. Of these 52 children, 43 required a single medication for seizure control (Group 1), while 9 required two or more medications for seizure control (Group 2). A significant difference (p < 0.05) was apparent between Group 1 and 2 with respect to gender (16/43 males vs 8/9 males) and mean age of diagnosis (8.19 years +/- 3.00 vs 6.06 years +/- 2.22). Age of onset of seizures, interval duration of seizures prior to treatment initiation, duration of seizures, presence of automatisms, family history, presence of co-morbid conditions and EEG findings were not found to be significantly different between the two Groups.
Male gender and an earlier age of diagnosis is associated with the need for two medications for seizure control in children with absence epilepsy. This observation may suggest the need for more intensive early programmatic follow-up for young male children with newly diagnosed absence epilepsy to effect more rapid attainment of seizure control.
失神癫痫是儿科临床中最常见的原发性全身性癫痫综合征。其治疗具有药物特异性,通常使用单一药物即可成功控制病情。本研究的目的是确定在一组连续性失神癫痫患儿初诊时,是否存在任何临床或脑电图特征与需要使用第二种药物治疗相关。
对一个计算机化的儿科神经病学数据库(涵盖1991年至2007年)进行回顾性检索,查找所有发作时年龄超过两岁、脑电图显示典型失神发作伴有3Hz棘慢波且无明显症状性病因、并至少有一年随访记录的患者。所有这些儿童随后被分为两组:a)仅需单一药物控制发作的患儿(第1组);b)尽管根据血清药物监测确定初始药物已进行了最佳治疗,但仍需两种药物控制发作的患儿(第2组)。然后对比第1组和第2组在诊断时明显的临床和脑电图特征。
最初确定了75例失神发作患儿中有52例符合研究纳入标准且无排除标准。在这52例儿童中,43例仅需单一药物控制发作(第1组),而9例需要两种或更多药物控制发作(第2组)。第1组和第2组在性别(16/43为男性 vs 8/9为男性)和平均诊断年龄(8.19岁±3.00岁 vs 6.06岁±2.22岁)方面存在显著差异(p < 0.05)。发作起始年龄、开始治疗前发作的间隔持续时间、发作持续时间、自动症的存在、家族史、共病情况的存在以及脑电图结果在两组之间未发现有显著差异。
男性性别和较早的诊断年龄与失神癫痫患儿需要两种药物控制发作有关。这一观察结果可能表明需要对新诊断为失神癫痫的年幼男性儿童进行更密集早期的计划性随访,以便更快实现发作控制。