1. Child Neurology: Neurophysiologic and Anatomical Correlates in Startle Epilepsy: A Comprehensive SEEG Investigation for Successful Resective Surgery.
- Author
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Kim J, Kim MJ, Yum MS, Ko TS, and Hong SH
- Subjects
- Humans, Epilepsy, Reflex surgery, Epilepsy, Reflex physiopathology, Male, Child, Female, Reflex, Startle physiology, Motor Cortex surgery, Motor Cortex physiopathology, Motor Cortex diagnostic imaging, Gyrus Cinguli surgery, Gyrus Cinguli physiopathology, Electroencephalography
- Abstract
Startle epilepsy, characterized by startle-provoked epileptic seizures, was historically recognized as one of the reflex epilepsies but currently lacks classification as a specific epileptic syndrome because of insufficient characterization. This study presents an institutional experience and review of relevant literature focusing on the neurophysiologic and anatomical aspects of startle epilepsy. We describe a pediatric patient with an underlying structural etiology of left frontal encephalomalacia who continued to experience disabling seizures despite multiple antiseizure medications and previous palliative surgery. A comprehensive presurgical evaluation using SEEG led to the resection of the left supplementary motor area and adjacent middle cingulate cortex, resulting in successful seizure remission. A literature review on the surgical treatment of startle epilepsy revealed consistent reports of successful seizure remission through neocortical resection of the supplementary motor area and/or cingulate region. This case study and literature review highlights startle epilepsy as a distinct form of epilepsy with identifiable neurophysiologic and anatomical characteristics. Our observations emphasize the potential of resective surgery as a viable treatment option for startle epilepsy and underscore the importance of neurophysiologic monitoring in guiding surgical interventions.
- Published
- 2025
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