A Case of a Seven-Year-old boy with Epilepsy with Myoclonic Absence: Importance of Seizure Semiology, Genetic Etiology, and Electroencephalogram Correlation for Timely Intervention.
Ingrid Frydson, Sreenivas Avula, Samiya Fatima Ahmad
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Abstract
Epilepsy with myoclonic absence (EMA) is a rare disorder with a mean age of onset of 7 years. It is characterized clinically by rhythmic, myoclonic jerking of the head, extremities or both, with impairment of consciousness and an ictal electroencephalogram (EEG) pattern of 3 Hz bilateral, synchronous and symmetrical spike and wave discharges. Prognosis is guarded and most patients are pharmaco-resistant. We present a case of EMA, found to have a FOXP1 gene pathogenic variation and a variance of unknown significance in the MBD5 gene, who was admitted to the intensive care unit in super-refractory status epilepticus. Given the overlap in symptoms of syndromes including myoclonic-astatic epilepsy, childhood absence epilepsy and juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, a detailed seizure semiology with EEG correlation, cannot be over emphasized. In this case, the genetic etiology may lend an interesting insight to the severity and prognosis.