Division of High-Consequence Pathogens and Pathology, National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Atlanta, GA, USA.
Lancet Neurol. 2013 Feb;12(2):166-74. doi: 10.1016/S1474-4422(12)70321-6. Epub 2013 Jan 8.
Nodding syndrome is an unexplained illness characterised by head-bobbing spells. The clinical and epidemiological features are incompletely described, and the explanation for the nodding and the underlying cause of nodding syndrome are unknown. We aimed to describe the clinical and neurological diagnostic features of this illness.
In December, 2009, we did a multifaceted investigation to assess epidemiological and clinical illness features in 13 parishes in Kitgum District, Uganda. We defined a case as a previously healthy child aged 5-15 years with reported nodding and at least one other neurological deficit. Children from a systematic sample of a case-control investigation were enrolled in a clinical case series which included history, physical assessment, and neurological examinations; a subset had electroencephalography (EEG), electromyography, brain MRI, CSF analysis, or a combination of these analyses. We reassessed the available children 8 months later.
We enrolled 23 children (median age 12 years, range 7-15 years) in the case-series investigation, all of whom reported at least daily head nodding. 14 children had reported seizures. Seven (30%) children had gross cognitive impairment, and children with nodding did worse on cognitive tasks than did age-matched controls, with significantly lower scores on tests of short-term recall and attention, semantic fluency and fund of knowledge, and motor praxis. We obtained CSF samples from 16 children, all of which had normal glucose and protein concentrations. EEG of 12 children with nodding syndrome showed disorganised, slow background (n=10), and interictal generalised 2·5-3·0 Hz spike and slow waves (n=10). Two children had nodding episodes during EEG, which showed generalised electrodecrement and paraspinal electromyography dropout consistent with atonic seizures. MRI in four of five children showed generalised cerebral and cerebellar atrophy. Reassessment of 12 children found that six worsened in their clinical condition between the first evaluation and the follow-up evaluation interval, as indicated by more frequent head nodding or seizure episodes, and none had cessation or decrease in frequency of these episodes.
Nodding syndrome is an epidemic epilepsy associated with encephalopathy, with head nodding caused by atonic seizures. The natural history, cause, and management of the disorder remain to be determined.
Division of Global Disease Detection and Emergency Response, US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
点头综合征是一种原因不明的疾病,其特征为出现头部摆动。该病的临床和流行病学特征尚未完全描述清楚,点头的原因和点头综合征的根本原因尚不清楚。本研究旨在描述这种疾病的临床和神经诊断特征。
2009 年 12 月,我们在乌干达基特古姆区的 13 个教区进行了一项多方面的调查,以评估该病的流行病学和临床特征。我们将符合以下条件的儿童定义为病例:年龄为 5-15 岁、此前健康、报告有点头症状且至少存在其他一种神经缺陷。在系统抽样病例对照研究中,我们纳入了患有该病的儿童,并进行了临床病例系列研究,包括病史、体格检查和神经学检查;部分儿童还接受了脑电图(EEG)、肌电图、脑 MRI、CSF 分析或这些分析的组合。8 个月后,我们重新评估了可评估的儿童。
我们共纳入了 23 名儿童(中位数年龄 12 岁,范围 7-15 岁)进行了病例系列研究,所有儿童均报告至少每天出现头部摆动。14 名儿童有癫痫发作。7 名(30%)儿童有明显的认知障碍,而且患有点头综合征的儿童在认知任务上的表现明显不如年龄匹配的对照组,在短期记忆和注意力、语义流畅性和知识储备、运动操作等测试中的得分明显更低。我们从 16 名患有点头综合征的儿童中获得了 CSF 样本,所有样本的葡萄糖和蛋白质浓度均正常。12 名患有点头综合征的儿童的 EEG 显示出无序、缓慢的背景(n=10),以及发作间期的广泛性 2·5-3·0 Hz 棘波和慢波(n=10)。两名儿童在 EEG 期间出现点头发作,EEG 显示出广泛性电极抑制和棘旁肌电图缺失,与失神发作一致。4 名儿童的 MRI 显示出大脑和小脑普遍萎缩。对 12 名儿童的第二次评估发现,6 名儿童在第一次评估和随访评估之间的病情恶化,表现为更频繁的点头或癫痫发作,而且没有儿童出现这些发作的停止或减少。
点头综合征是一种与脑病相关的流行性癫痫,点头由失神发作引起。该疾病的自然史、病因和治疗方法仍有待确定。
美国疾病控制与预防中心全球疾病检测与应急反应司。