25 research outputs found

    Risk factors associated with refractory epilepsy in children

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    Posters: no. P7BACKGROUND: There is a lack of consensus about the definition of intractable or refractory epilepsy in children. Medically intractable epilepsy occurred in 10 to 20% of epilepsy with childhood onset. Patients with medical intractability had immense resource implication and lifelong disability/disabilities. Early identification of risk factors for refractory epilepsy offers a chance of appropriate and timely treatment thus affecting prognosis. METHODS: A retrospective study was performed for our cohort of 505 children aged below 18 years with new-onset epilepsy, diagnosed between 1979 and 2006, and actively managed at the Comprehensive Epilepsy Clinic, Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine of the University of Hong Kong. We arbitrarily defined refractory epilepsy as those who had never been seizure-free for more than 12 months despite receiving anti-epileptic drug (AED) treatment. Responders were arbitrarily defined as those who had at least been seizure-free for consecutive 12 months. All patients had been on one or more AEDs and were followed up for at least 24 months after AED initiation. The demographic, clinical, diagnostic, investigative, management and seizure outcome at 2 years were analysed. RESULTS: At 2 years’ follow up, 42% (n=212) had refractory epilepsy. Risk factors significantly correlated with refractory epilepsy included history of status epilepticus (P<0.001), symptomatic aetiology (P<0.001), use of two or more AEDs (P=0.001), abnormal neurological co-morbidities including mental retardation (IQ<70) [P<0.001], learning disabilities (IQ=70-90) [P=0.009], cerebral palsy (P=0.011), abnormalities in EEG (P<0.001) and neuroimaging (P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Early identification of risk factors to predict possible medical intractability is important in improving treatment strategies especially in the selection of traditional versus newer AEDs, mono- versus poly-pharmacy or even earlier alternative epilepsy management decision plans including evaluation for possible surgical therapies.published_or_final_versionThe 1st Hong Kong Neurological Congress cum 22nd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Hong Kong Neurological Society, Hong Kong, 6-8 November 2009. In Hong Kong Medical Journal, 2009, v. 15 n. 6, suppl. 7, p. 42, abstract P

    Posterior Reversible Encephalopathy Syndrome: paediatric heart transplant with cyclosporine neurotoxicity

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    Posters: no. P8Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is associated with a specific disorder of cerebrovascular autoregulation. Clinical features of PRES consisted of headache, decreased consciousness, altered mental functioning, seizures, visual loss or cortical blindness. Characteristic findings on neuroimaging included high signal intensity on T2-weighted as well as diffusion-weighted imaging MRI in the posterior cerebral hemispheres, indicative of vasogenic subcortical oedema without infarction. Cyclosporine neurotoxicity had been described following bone marrow and organ transplantation; however, there are few reports of PRES in children especially post-paediatric heart transplantation. We report a case of cyclosporine-related PRES in a paediatric heart transplant recipient. She made a good recovery with no residual neurological deficits after withdrawal of cyclosporine, control of possible risk factors as well as symptomatic control of seizure.published_or_final_versionThe 1st Hong Kong Neurological Congress cum 22nd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Hong Kong Neurological Society, Hong Kong, 6-8 November 2009. In Hong Kong Medical Journal, 2009, v. 15 n. 6, suppl. 7, p. 42, abstract P

    Neuroimaging techniques in epilepsy

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    Objective: To review state-of-the-art neuroimaging modalities in epilepsy and their clinical applications. Data sources and study selection: PubMed literature searches to March 2010, using the following key words: 'epilepsy', 'positron emission tomography (PET)', 'single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)', 'MR volumetry', 'diffusion tensor imaging', and 'functional MR imaging'. Data extraction All articles including neuroimaging techniques in epilepsy were included in the review. Data synthesis High-field magnetic resonance imaging is fundamental for high-resolution structural imaging. Functional radionuclide imaging (positron emission tomography/single-photon emission computed tomography) can provide additional information to improve overall accuracy, and show good results with high concordance rates in temporal lobe epilepsy. Magnetic resonance spectroscopy is a useful adjunct consistently demonstrating changing metabolites in the epileptogenic region. Magnetic resonance volumetric imaging shows excellent sensitivity and specificity for temporal lobe epilepsy but thus far it has been inconsistent for extratemporal epilepsy. Diffusion tensor imaging with tractography allows visualisation of specific tracts such as connections with the language and visual cortex to enhance preoperative evaluation. Functional magnetic resonance imaging using blood oxygen level-dependent activation techniques is mainly used in presurgical planning for the high-sensitivity mapping of the eloquent cortex. Both contrast-bolus and arterial spin labelling magnetic resonance perfusion imaging show good correlation with clinical lateralisation of seizure disorder. Conclusion Structural imaging is essential in localisation and lateralization of the seizure focus. Functional radionuclide imaging or advanced magnetic resonance imaging techniques can provide complementary information when an epileptogenic substrate is not identified or in the presence of non-concordant clinical and structural findings.link_to_subscribed_fulltex

    Anti-NMDA-R encephalitis: an encephalitis lerthargica-like illness

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    Posters: no. P14A girl of 3 years and 9 months with a 3-day history of fever and upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) was admitted with a generalised tonic-clonic convulsion, and delirium with screaming, non-sense talking, and agitation. For the first week after admission, she was lethargic with fluctuating awareness and mutism during the day but poor sleep at night. Workup for acute encephalopathy including autoimmune, infective, toxicology, metabolic and vasculitic screening showed negative findings. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was markedly elevated and ...published_or_final_versionThe 1st Hong Kong Neurological Congress cum 22nd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Hong Kong Neurological Society, Hong Kong, 6-8 November 2009. In Hong Kong Medical Journal, 2009, v. 15 n. 6, suppl. 7, p. 47, abstract P1

    Paediatric Epilepsy Surgery Programme in Hong Kong: experience in Queen Mary Hospital/Duchess of Kent Children's Hospital

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    Poster: no. P6BACKGROUND: Surgery is a well-established treatment for adults with intractable seizures. Increasingly, infants and children are being considered for epilepsy surgery. In a growing child, epilepsy surgery has the additional benefit of aborting cognitive decline and improving development and behaviour. METHODS: The paediatric epilepsy surgery programme ...published_or_final_versio

    Paediatric Epilepsy Surgery Programme in Hong Kong: experience in Queen Mary Hospital / Duchess of Kent Children's Hospital

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    Poster: no. P6BACKGROUND: Surgery is a well-established treatment for adults with intractable seizures. Increasingly, infants and children are being considered for epilepsy surgery. In a growing child, epilepsy surgery has the additional benefit of aborting cognitive decline and improving development and behaviour ...published_or_final_versio

    White matter volume and anisotropy in very low birth weight preterm born children: association with cognitive outcome

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    INTRODUCTION: Low birth weight premature infants are at risk of brain injury, especially to the white matter. These complications result from either the inability to repair the lesions acquired around birth, or disruption of the normal maturation process. It has been shown in normal and disease populations that white matter parameters are associated with cognitive function (1-3). We hypothesize that mean white matter volume and anisotropy are reduced in children who were born very low birth weight (2500grams) and that these parameters of white matter damage correlate with cognitive outcome …published_or_final_versio

    Clinical outcome and long term prognosis of childhood epilepsy

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    The 8th Asian & Oceanian Epilepsy Congress (AOEC), Melbourne, Australia, 21-24 October 2010
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