Dados do Trabalho
Título
ELECTRICAL STATUS EPILEPTICUS IN SLEEP (ESES): A CASE SERIES OF 10 PATIENTS
Introdução
Electrical Status Epilepticus in Sleep (ESES) is a rare electrographic pattern in less than 1% of epilepsy cases, characterized by significant epileptiform activity during non-REM sleep, often leading to epilepsy and encephalopathy. This study presents the clinical characteristics of 10 ESES patients.
Objetivo
This study aims to delineate the clinical profiles of 10 children diagnosed with ESES, highlighting the impact of various anti-seizure medications (ASM) and the associated neurological outcomes.
Método
Undergraduate scientific research project (CAAE: 334383220.9.0000.5558), a descriptive, retrospective cross-sectional study, based on the collection of data from the medical records of 10 patients with ESES and some degree of clinical neurological deterioration, cognitive engagement and / or behavioral disorder, treated at the Pediatric Neurology outpatient clinics of the University Hospital of Brasília. The following aspects were evaluated: gender, age at which ESES was identified, electrographic pattern prior to ESES, etiology, duration of ESES, type of epileptic seizures, Anti-Seizure Medications (ASM) used at the time of diagnosis and in the control.
Resultados
There were 7 male patients, with a mean age of 6.9 years (2 to 11 years). Eight patients had an EEG with predominantly Benign Childhood Epilepsy with Centro-Temporal Spikes (BCECTS). The etiology was defined in five patients (1 with frontal gliosis; 1 with pachygyria, 1 with perisylvian polymicrogyria, 1 with temporal venous anomaly and 1 with sequelae lesion in the thalamus). The ESES had a mean duration of 2.1 years (4 months to 3.6 years), being higher in the group of patients with structural damage (2.3 x 1.9 years). There was a predominance of focal motor seizures (6 patients). On average, 3.8 ASM (1 to 8) were used in mono- or polytherapy. At the time of diagnosis, the most commonly used ASM was valproic acid (VA) (7 patients). Seizure control was obtained in 8 of 10 patients, and 6 patients maintained VA, associated with clobazam in 4 and levetiracetam in 2. Corticosteroid therapy was used in 50% of the sample, for a mean period of 2.8 months.
Conclusão
The study confirmed typical ESES demographics and symptoms, noting prevalent brain injuries and focal seizures. The efficacy of valproic acid over carbamazepine suggests alternative therapies could be more effective, highlighting the influence of intrinsic factors in ESES pathophysiology and the need for further research on personalized treatments.
Referências
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Palavras Chave
epilepsy; eses; Pediatric Epilepsy
Área
Epilepsias
Autores
ALAN SANTOS MARRA, FLAVIA NUNES FERREIRA, JENNIFER JORGE DE SALES, PRISCILA MARTINS CAMARA, PAULO EMIDIO LOBAO CUNHA, LISIANE SEGUTI FERREIRA