Author/Authors :
TAGHDIRI، Mohammad Mahdi نويسنده Pediatric Neurology Research Center, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences (SBMU), Tehran, Iran , , NEMATI، Hamid نويسنده Pediatric Neurology Research Center, Mofid Children Hospital, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Scineces, Tehran ,Iran ,
Abstract :
Infantile spasm (IS) is a convulsive disease characterized by brief, symmetric
axial muscle contraction (neck, trunk, and/or extremities). IS is a type of seizure
that was first described by West in 1841, who witnessed the seizure in his own
son. West’s syndrome refers to the classic triad of spasms, characteristic EEG,
and neurodevelopmental regression. Most cases involve flexors and extensors,
but either of the types may be involved independently.
IS, as its name implies, most often occurs during the first year of life with an
incidence of approximately 1 per 2000-4000 live births. Most, but not all, patients
with this disorder have severe EEG abnormalities; this pattern was originally
referred to as hypsarrhythmia by Gibbs and Gibbs. Cases with known etiology
or signs of brain damage are considered as symptomatic. The Overall prognosis
of the disease is poor. Peak onset age of the epileptic syndrome is 3 to 7 months,
which mainly occurs before 2 years of age in 93% of patients. Hypsarrhythmia
is the EEG hallmark of IS, which comprised a chaotic, bilaterally asynchronous
high-voltage polyspike, and slow wave discharges interspersed with multifocal
spikes and slow waves.
Etiological classification is as follows: 1) Symptomatic: with identifiable prenatal,
perinatal, and postnatal causes with developmental delay at the presentation time;
2) Cryptogenic: unknown underlying cause, normal development at the onset of
spasms, normal neurological exam and neuroimaging, and no abnormality in the
metabolic evaluation; 3) Idiopathic: pure functional cerebral dysfunction with
complete recovery, no residual dysfunction, normal neuroimaging and normal
etiologic evaluation, and normal neurodevelopment.