Article

Panayiotopoulos syndrome: a prospective study of 192 patients.

Hospital Nacional de Pediatria Juan P. Garrahan, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Epilepsia (impact factor: 3.96). 07/2007; 48(6):1054-61. DOI:10.1111/j.1528-1167.2007.01085.x pp.1054-61
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT To characterize the electroclinical features and evolution of Panayiotopoulos Syndrome (PS).
Children with electroclinical criteria of PS were prospectively identified and followed-up clinically, and with sleep and awake EEGs between February 1990 and 2006.
We identified 192 patients with PS. In the same length of time 398 children with benign childhood epilepsy with centro-temporal spikes (BCECTS) were registered. PS had a peak age at onset of 5 years. Autonomic manifestations were one of the most common ictal event. Ictal deviation of the eyes and progression to generalized convulsions were also quite frequent. Approximately one third had partial status epilepticus. In all patients except five, the seizures occurred during sleep. One-third also had fits while awake. Sixteen children had concomitant symptoms of rolandic epilepsy and eight developed rolandic seizures after remission of PS seizures. Prognosis was excellent. Eighty-four (44.2%) had a single seizure, 79 (41.2%) had 2-5 fits, and 28 (14.6%) had frequent seizures.
PS is less common than BCECTS, but is well defined and easily recognizable by clinical and EEG features, with autonomic manifestations as one of the most common ictal event.

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Keywords

autonomic manifestations
 
awake
 
awake EEGs
 
benign childhood epilepsy
 
common
 
common ictal event
 
EEG features
 
electroclinical criteria
 
electroclinical features
 
followed-up clinically
 
generalized convulsions
 
Ictal deviation
 
Panayiotopoulos Syndrome
 
peak age
 
Prognosis
 
PS seizures
 
recognizable
 
rolandic epilepsy
 
rolandic seizures
 
time 398 children