Early Childhood (infancy – 2 years)
Benign sleep myoclonus
These are myoclonic jerks that occur during sleep in young children, which stop if the child is woken up
– They are complete benign and not real seizures and self-limiting, so only need to provide reassurance to parents.
Infantile spasms (West’s syndrome)
This is a rare form of epilepsy in children which is usually 2nd to a serious neurological abnormality.
– it is thought to be due to malfunction of the regulation of GABA transmission
Symptoms:
– Triad of muscle spasm attacks
– Lightning attacks –> (rapid flexion of head, trunk and limbs)
– Nodding attack –> convulsions of throat and neck flexor muscles where chin jerks down and head drawn in
– Salaam/jack-knife attack –> flexor spasms which resembles the Muslim salaam greeting
– Patient also have intellectual disabilities
Diagnosis:
EEG shows hypsarrthymia, a chaotic and disorganised electrical activity with no pattern
Management:
– Hormonal therapy such as steroid or ACTH
– Can also use Vigabatrin, which inhibits GABA breakdown to increase inhibitory transmission
Mid-Childhood (2-9 years)
Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome (LGS)
This is a rare condition which gives epilepsy in children around the age of 3-5 and persists into childhood
– Around 20% of children with West’s syndrome will go on to develop LGS)
Symptoms:
– Seizures –> mostly tonic seizures which occur during non-REM sleep
– Seizures can occur daily and are difficult to treat with anticonvulsive medication
– Maybe a clinical history of West’s syndrome
– Eye problems –> 90% also have eye dysfunction e.g., refractive error, strabismus
Diagnosis;
EEG shows characteristic slow wave spike
Management:
– 1st line is sodium valproate
– Ketogenic diet –> helps to decrease frequency of seizures
Childhood Absence Epilepsy
This is an idiopathic epilepsy disorder which caused absence seizures in normally healthy children
– Children have absence seizures which are brief but can occur up to hundreds of times a day
– Can cause some automatisms, but the presence of major motor symptoms excludes the diagnosis
Symptoms:
– Multiple short (4-20s) absence seizures with quick recovery
– Apart from this they have normal development (most will become seizure free in adolescence)
– No major motor symptoms
Diagnosis:
– MRI is normal
– EEG shows characteristic 3Hz, generalised symmetrical spikes
Management:
– Sodium valproate or ethosuximide
Benign Rolandic epilepsy
This is the most common epilepsy syndrome in children, starting around 3-13 and stops about 14-18 years
– The seizures start around the central sulcus of the brain, around the Rolandic Fissure
– These children usually have normal intelligence and development, and learning can remain unimpaired
Symptoms:
Single focal seizures giving unilateral face paraesthesia when waking up
Diagnosis:
EEG shows characteristic spikes in the centro-temporal area
Management:
As so mild, treatment often unnecessary –> but 1st line is Carbamazepine for the focal seizure
Febrile Convulsions
This is a seizure associated with a fever of greater then 38 degrees Celsius in an otherwise healthy child.
– They usually occur before the age of 5 and rarer to see in older children. The key point is that they are a consequence of the acute infection and not associated with underlying neurological problems.
Symptoms:
– Brief tonic-clonic seizures lasting less than 5 minutes
– Typically, are provoked by a viral infection, so there will be signs of a concurrent illness.
Typically, febrile convulsions are divided according to their duration:
i) Simple –> last <15 minutes and will resemble a generalised seizure. They do not recur within 24 hours
ii) Complex –> they last 15-30 minutes and resemble a focal seizure
– Can have repeats within 24 hours and recovery maybe incomplete (Todd’s palsy)
iii) Status epileptics –> this is a febrile seizure which lasts >30 minutes
Diagnosis:
Based on the history, no real need to blood test, MRI, or EEG
Management:
– If it is the first seizure, or any features of a complex seizure –> admit to hospital
– If recurrences, parent should be taught how to use rectal diazepam or buccal midazolam
– For the acute seizure, management is the same.
Reflex anoxic seizures
These are seizures that occur in healthy children in response to painful or emotional stimuli.
– They are caused by neurally-mediated transient asystole in children with very sensitive vagal cardiac reflexes and are not epileptic seizures or epilepsy
Symptoms:
Child turns pale and falls to floor, followed by rapid recovery
Diagnosis:
Clinical diagnosis of exclusion
Management:
No treatment needed, and it has a very good prognosis
Late-Childhood (> 9 years)
Juvenile Myoclonic epilepsy (Janz Syndrome)
This is a common form of generalised epilepsy in teenage children aged 12-18 which is more common in girls
– Disorder typically involves infrequent generalised seizures early in the morning as it is associated with sleep deprivation
Symptoms:
– Brief episodes of involuntary muscle contractions in morning or before falling asleep
– The myoclonic jerks are more common in arms than legs (may result in dropping objects)
– These myoclonic jerks are followed by generalised tonic-clinic seizures after a few months
Diagnosis:
EEG shows characteristic 4-6Hz polyspike and slow wave discharges
Management:
1st line is Sodium Valproate, and avoid sleep deprivation