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Claustrum damage and refractory status epilepticus following febrile illness.

Authors :
Meletti S
Slonkova J
Mareckova I
Monti G
Specchio N
Hon P
Giovannini G
Marcian V
Chiari A
Krupa P
Pietrafusa N
Berankova D
Bar M
Source :
Neurology [Neurology] 2015 Oct 06; Vol. 85 (14), pp. 1224-32. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Sep 04.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Objective: To characterize the clinical, EEG, and brain imaging findings in an adult case series of patients with de novo refractory status epilepticus (SE) occurring after a febrile illness.<br />Methods: A retrospective study (2010-2013) was undertaken with the following inclusion criteria: (1) previously healthy adults with refractory SE; (2) seizure onset 0-21 days after a febrile illness; (3) lacking evidence of infectious agents in CSF; (4) no history of seizures (febrile or afebrile) or previous or concomitant neurologic disorder.<br />Results: Among 155 refractory SE cases observed in the study period, 6 patients (17-35 years old) fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Confusion and stupor were the most common symptoms at disease onset, followed after a few days by acute repeated seizures that were uncountable in all but one. Seizures consisted of focal motor/myoclonic phenomena with subsequent generalization. Antiepileptic drugs failed in every patient to control seizures, with all participants requiring intensive care unit admission. Barbiturate coma with burst-suppression pattern was applied in 4 out of 6 patients for 5-14 days. One participant died in the acute phase. In each patient, we observed a reversible bilateral claustrum MRI hyperintensity on T2-weighted sequences, without restricted diffusion, time-related with SE. All patients had negative multiple neural antibodies testing. Four out of 5 surviving patients developed chronic epilepsy.<br />Conclusions: This is a hypothesis-generating study of a preliminary nature supporting the role of the claustrum in postfebrile de novo SE; future prospective studies are needed to delineate the specificity of this condition, its pathogenesis, and the etiology.<br /> (© 2015 American Academy of Neurology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1526-632X
Volume :
85
Issue :
14
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26341869
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000001996