Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s Experience

Abstract Epilepsy is a common manifestation of mitochondrial disease. In a large cohort of children and adolescents with mitochondrial disease (n = 180), over 48% of patients developed seizures. The majority (68%) of patients were younger than 3 years and medically intractable (90%). The electroencephalographic pattern of multiregional epileptiform discharges over the left and right hemisphere with background slowing occurred in 62%. The epilepsy syndrome, infantile spasms, was seen in 17%. Polymerase ? mutations were the most common genetic etiology of seizures, representing Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome (14%). The severity of disease in those patients with epilepsy was significant, as 13% of patients experienced early death. Simply the loss of energy production cannot explain the development of seizures or all patients with mitochondrial dysfunction would have epilepsy. Until the various aspects of mitochondrial physiology that are involved in proper brain development are understood, epilepsy and its treatment will remain unsatisfactory.

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Main Author: Saneto,Russell P.
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Latin American Society Inborn Errors and Neonatal Screening (SLEIMPN); Instituto Genética para Todos (IGPT) 2017
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2326-45942017000100308
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spelling oai:scielo:S2326-459420170001003082019-05-14Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s ExperienceSaneto,Russell P. epilepsy seizures mitochondrial disease electroencephalogram infantile spasms Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome status epilepticus treatment Abstract Epilepsy is a common manifestation of mitochondrial disease. In a large cohort of children and adolescents with mitochondrial disease (n = 180), over 48% of patients developed seizures. The majority (68%) of patients were younger than 3 years and medically intractable (90%). The electroencephalographic pattern of multiregional epileptiform discharges over the left and right hemisphere with background slowing occurred in 62%. The epilepsy syndrome, infantile spasms, was seen in 17%. Polymerase ? mutations were the most common genetic etiology of seizures, representing Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome (14%). The severity of disease in those patients with epilepsy was significant, as 13% of patients experienced early death. Simply the loss of energy production cannot explain the development of seizures or all patients with mitochondrial dysfunction would have epilepsy. Until the various aspects of mitochondrial physiology that are involved in proper brain development are understood, epilepsy and its treatment will remain unsatisfactory.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessLatin American Society Inborn Errors and Neonatal Screening (SLEIMPN); Instituto Genética para Todos (IGPT)Journal of Inborn Errors of Metabolism and Screening v.5 20172017-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2326-45942017000100308en10.1177/2326409817733012
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databasecode rev-scielo-br
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region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Saneto,Russell P.
spellingShingle Saneto,Russell P.
Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s Experience
author_facet Saneto,Russell P.
author_sort Saneto,Russell P.
title Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s Experience
title_short Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s Experience
title_full Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s Experience
title_fullStr Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s Experience
title_full_unstemmed Epilepsy and Mitochondrial Dysfunction: A Single Center’s Experience
title_sort epilepsy and mitochondrial dysfunction: a single center’s experience
description Abstract Epilepsy is a common manifestation of mitochondrial disease. In a large cohort of children and adolescents with mitochondrial disease (n = 180), over 48% of patients developed seizures. The majority (68%) of patients were younger than 3 years and medically intractable (90%). The electroencephalographic pattern of multiregional epileptiform discharges over the left and right hemisphere with background slowing occurred in 62%. The epilepsy syndrome, infantile spasms, was seen in 17%. Polymerase ? mutations were the most common genetic etiology of seizures, representing Alpers-Huttenlocher syndrome (14%). The severity of disease in those patients with epilepsy was significant, as 13% of patients experienced early death. Simply the loss of energy production cannot explain the development of seizures or all patients with mitochondrial dysfunction would have epilepsy. Until the various aspects of mitochondrial physiology that are involved in proper brain development are understood, epilepsy and its treatment will remain unsatisfactory.
publisher Latin American Society Inborn Errors and Neonatal Screening (SLEIMPN); Instituto Genética para Todos (IGPT)
publishDate 2017
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S2326-45942017000100308
work_keys_str_mv AT sanetorussellp epilepsyandmitochondrialdysfunctionasinglecentersexperience
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