Differentiating non-epileptic seizures from epileptic seizures in Glut1 deficiency syndrome 2024 Ito et al

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  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

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    Abstract

    Aim

    To investigate the clinical characteristics of non-epileptic seizures due to transient brain dysfunction caused by energy deficiency after prolonged fasting or exercise in individuals with glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome (Glut1DS), and then elucidate further the seizure features to distinguish non-epileptic seizures from epileptic seizures.

    Method
    This retrospective case–control study included 57 non-epileptic seizures and 23 epileptic seizures (control group) in 14 individuals (11 males, three females; aged 5–44 years, median = 20 years) with Glut1DS, all with a heterozygous pathogenic SLC2A1 mutation.

    Results
    Non-epileptic seizures were classified as paroxysmal altered consciousness (n = 8), movement disorders (n = 35) (eye-head movements, ataxia, spasticity, weakness, involuntary movement), dysaesthesia (n = 8), and vomiting (n = 6) at the peak ages at onset of 5 to 10 years. Ketogenic diet therapy was effective in 33 of 43 (77%) non-epileptic seizures. Providing supplementary food before high-impact exercise or during attacks prevented or mitigated non-epileptic seizures in some individuals. Glut1DS-associated non-epileptic seizures are fundamentally situation-related seizures with specific provoking and ameliorating factors. Non-epileptic seizures can be distinguished from epileptic seizures by the absence of complete consciousness loss and rapid postictal recovery despite prolonged seizures.

    Interpretation
    Non-epileptic seizures are not well recognized but require different therapeutic approaches compared to epileptic seizures. Awareness of the differentiation of non-epileptic seizures from epileptic seizures is essential when performing preventive or therapeutic decision-making for acute exacerbation seizures.

    Paywall, https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/dmcn.15942
     

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