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      The early-infantile epileptic encephalopathy with suppression-burst: developmental aspects.

      Brain & development
      Electroencephalography, Epilepsy, etiology, physiopathology, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Infant, Infant, Newborn, Male, Spasms, Infantile

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          Abstract

          A clinico-electroencephalographic study on 14 cases of the early-infantile epileptic encephalopathy with suppression-burst (EIEE) including long-term follow-up studies for one year 8 months to 12 years 2 months disclosed the specificity of EIEE in its developmental aspects. With age, clinical evolution from EIEE to the West syndrome was observed in as many as 10 cases, among which two cases showed further transition to the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Electroencephalographically, suppression-burst pattern gradually began to disappear from age of 3 months and disappeared by 6 months in all the cases, transforming to hypsarhythmia in 10 cases from 2 to 6 months of age, showing further transition to diffuse slow spike-and-waves in 2 cases at one year and one month and at 3 years and one month of age, respectively. Changing pattern of EEG were classifiable into two types which strongly related to the prognosis. These findings indicated EIEE to be an independent epileptic syndrome as the earliest form of the age-dependent epileptic encephalopathy.

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