Paper test can reveal childhood absence
epilepsy.
by McNamara, Damian
MIAMI -- Absence epilepsy seizures can be differentiated from
daydreaming or ADHD with a simple office procedure involving a piece of
paper and nothing more.
"Hyperventilate the child by having them blow on a paper or on
their own, and you will see loss of consciousness [if they have absence
epilepsy]," according to Dr. Michael S. Duchowny, who added:
"It's a very easy thing to do in your office."
In the absence of a piece of paper, one tip is an obvious onset and
offset of the transient loss of consciousness characteristic of absence
seizures. "You cannot snap the child out of it during an
episode," Dr. Duchowny said.
EEG can confirm the diagnosis of absence epilepsy. The readout will
show bilateral, symmetric, and synchronous 3-Hz spikes and wave
discharges against a normal EEG background, Dr. Duchowny said.
The age at which a child presents with absence seizures is an
important consideration. Also, some antiepileptic agents are recommended
whereas others should be avoided, Dr. Duchowny said. Even with early
treatment, children with absence epilepsy should be monitored long term
for psychosocial deficits.
Physicians who suspect a child is experiencing absence
seizures--formerly known as petit mal epilepsy--should first rule out
other conditions, said Dr. Duchowny, director of the comprehensive
epilepsy program at Miami Children's Hospital.
Onset of absence seizures usually begins in children 5-12 years
old. "A red flag should go up with any child who comes into your
office before age 5 with absence seizures. This is unusual--you need to
look for other developmental disorders," Dr. Duchowny said at a
pediatric update sponsored by Miami Children's Hospital.
First-line treatment includes standard antiepileptic drugs (AEDs)
such as ethosuximide, valproic acid, or clonazepam, Dr. Duchowny said.
Newer AEDs are also effective, such as lamotrigine, levetiracetam, or
topiramate. However, AEDS to avoid include carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine,
phenytoin, and gabapentin, he said. Dr. Duchowny received an honorarium
from and is on the speakers bureau for GlaxoSmithKline Inc.
A National Institutes of Health--sponsored monotherapy trial
underway "may give us some information for the first time on the
most effective agents."
Despite timely treatment, children with absence epilepsy should be
monitored for adverse psychosocial effects, Dr. Duchowny said. "If
one looks long term at children with absence seizures, sometimes the
outlook may not be as favorable as we think."
For example, adults with a history of childhood absence seizures,
even when they remained seizure-free, had greater difficulty with
academic, social, and behavior domains, according to a cohort study
(Arch. Pediatr. Adolesc. Med. 1997;151:152-8). The mean follow-up for
the 58 patients in the study was 23 years.
Absence seizures can occur as a discrete seizure type or a robust
epilepsy syndrome with associated symptoms. If the child has the
syndrome, physicians and parents might see frequent automatisms, such as
lip smacking or eye closure, especially during longer seizures.
"Absences tend to disappear around age 15 or 16 years,"
Dr. Duchowny said. "You can tell families these seizures will not
recur later in fife. They 'time on' but they also 'time
off.' " If the child experiences mixed seizure types, such as
concomitant generalized tonic-clonic seizures, they can persist in some
patients, he added.
Absence seizures must be the initial and most prominent type of
seizure for the diagnosis of childhood absence epilepsy. "By and
large, these children are neurologically healthy," Dr. Duchowny
said.
In contrast, a small subset of patients can have atypical absence
seizures. Poor seizure control and persistence of epilepsy are more
common with atypical seizures. "These typically occur in children
with some type of associated neurologic disability," Dr. Duchowny
said. The seizures generally occur in children with development delay
and often coexist with other seizure types, especially tonic-clonic,
myoclonic, and tonic seizures. "These children often have a much
poorer neurodevelopmental outcome, including less control of seizures,
even with medication."
BY DAMIAN McNAMARA
Miami Bureau
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