Clinical profile of patients with rolandic epilepsy at a clinic in rural Maharashtra.

BECTS Rolandic seizure benign childhood epilepsy centro-temporal spike

Journal

Journal of family medicine and primary care
ISSN: 2249-4863
Titre abrégé: J Family Med Prim Care
Pays: India
ID NLM: 101610082

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Mar 2021
Historique:
received: 05 07 2020
revised: 13 09 2020
accepted: 23 09 2020
entrez: 27 5 2021
pubmed: 28 5 2021
medline: 28 5 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

To describe the seizure pattern, treatment strategies and outcome in a series of children with Rolandic seizures or childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes. Patients were defined as Rolandic epilepsy if on electroencephalographic studies high voltage spike and waves were seen in centrotemporal areas, could be followed by slow waves, often activated on sleep and could shift from one side to other or be secondarily generalized. Typical (TRS) or benign were those with normal intellect. Atypical rolandic seizures (ARS) were those associated with neuroregression of language and cognitive milestones. Patients were treated with antiepileptic drugs if more than one episode occurred or the first episode was generalized status epilepticus. Thirty-three patients were included over the period of eight years (2012-2020). There was male preponderance (21 males versus 12 females). Four patients (12.12%) later evolved into Landau Kleffner syndrome (ARS group). The mean age of onset of epilepsy in the TRS group (29 patients) was 7.2 (+/-2.2) with the youngest patient being 4 years and the eldest being 12 years. In the ARS group the mean age of onset was 5 yrs. (+/-1.41). In the TRS group, 23 (79.31%) patients were managed on monotherapy AED. Seventeen patients (58.62%) responded (remission) to carbamazepine monotherapy alone. Six patients (20.68%) could afford oxcarbazepine monotherapy and went in remission with this therapy. In the ARS group all patients required three drugs (valproate, clobazam and levetiracetam). By the end of the study period, 23/33 (75.75%) patients remained seizure free. Most patients with rolandic seizures have excellent prognosis being seizure free around puberty. The neurological outcome in most patients was normal.

Identifiants

pubmed: 34041163
doi: 10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_1355_20
pii: JFMPC-10-1263
pmc: PMC8140235
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

1263-1266

Informations de copyright

Copyright: © 2021 Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care.

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

There are no conflicts of interest.

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Auteurs

Sunil Sable (S)

Dr. Sunil Sable Paediatric Neurology and Cardiology Centre, Zopadi Canteen, Ahmednagar, India.

Rachna Sable (R)

Dr. Sunil Sable Paediatric Neurology and Cardiology Centre, Zopadi Canteen, Ahmednagar, India.

Parag Tamhankar (P)

Centre for Medical Genetics, Office No 250 and 251, Ecstasy Business Park, JSD Road, Mulund West, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India Centre at which study carried out: Dr Sunil Sable Children's Hospital and Saikrishna Child Neurology Centre, Shirdi -423109, Maharashtra, India.

Vasundhara Tamhankar (V)

Centre for Medical Genetics, Office No 250 and 251, Ecstasy Business Park, JSD Road, Mulund West, Mumbai, Maharashtra, India Centre at which study carried out: Dr Sunil Sable Children's Hospital and Saikrishna Child Neurology Centre, Shirdi -423109, Maharashtra, India.

Classifications MeSH