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Benign familial infantile convulsions: A clinical study of seven Dutch families

Authors :
Callenbach, P.M.C. (Petra)
Frants, R.R. (Rune)
Brouwer, O.F. (Oebele)
Coo, I.F.M. (René) de
Vein, A.A. (Alla)
Arts, W.F.M. (Willem Frans)
Oosterwijk, J.C. (Jan)
Hageman, G.S. (Gregory)
Houten, R. (Robert) ten
Terwindt, G.M. (Gisela)
Lindhout, D. (Dick)
Callenbach, P.M.C. (Petra)
Frants, R.R. (Rune)
Brouwer, O.F. (Oebele)
Coo, I.F.M. (René) de
Vein, A.A. (Alla)
Arts, W.F.M. (Willem Frans)
Oosterwijk, J.C. (Jan)
Hageman, G.S. (Gregory)
Houten, R. (Robert) ten
Terwindt, G.M. (Gisela)
Lindhout, D. (Dick)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Benign familial infantile convulsions (BFIC) is a recently identified partial epilepsy syndrome with onset between 3 and 12 months of age. We describe the clinical characteristics and outcome of 43 patients with BFIC from six Dutch families and one Dutch-Canadian family and the encountered difficulties in classifying the syndrome. Four families had a pure BFIC phenotype; in two families BFIC was accompanied by paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesias; in one family BFIC was associated with later onset focal epilepsy in older generations. Onset of seizures was between 6 weeks and 10 months, and seizures remitted before the age of 3 years in all patients with BFIC. In all, 29 (67%) of the 43 patients had been treated with anti-epileptic drugs for a certain period of time. BFIC is often not recognized as (hereditary) epilepsy by the treating physician. Seizures often remit shortly after the start of anti-epileptic drugs but, because of the benign course of the syndrome and the spontaneous remission of seizures, patients with low seizure fre

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, European Journal of Paediatric Neurology vol. 6 no. 5, pp. 269-283, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn929957678
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1053.ejpn.2002.0609