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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0009952 (
febrile convulsions
)
1,215
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Febrile seizures
are the most common form of seizures, occurring in an estimated 2-5% of North American children. We carried out a systematic pedigree study of
febrile seizure
probands. Forty of 52 probands (77%) in a referral population selected for increased severity had more than one case per family: one family had 10 cases, one family had 7, 3 families had 6, 2 had 5, 3 had 4, 13 had 3, and 17 had 2 cases. Mode of inheritance in the multicase families best fit the hypothesis of autosomal dominance with reduced penetrance. Polygenic inheritance could not be excluded for some of the smaller families. There was no support for
X-linked
or mitochondrial inheritance. Penetrance was calculated to be 0.64. Because the cases were selected for increased severity, this represents a useful estimate of the upper limit of penetrance and is in agreement with twin studies. Simulated lod scores showed adequate power for a linkage study in the absence of heterogeneity. Individual families had simulated average lod scores as high as 2.1. However, with potential heterogeneity, assuming only 70% of families share the same disease locus, average lod scores were marginal, and a high density map of marker loci and additional families would be required to document linkage.
...
PMID:Pedigree analysis in families with febrile seizures. 883 46
Colpocephaly is an abnormal congenital enlargement of the occipital horns of the lateral ventricles, which has typically been associated with learning disability, seizures, and motor and visual abnormalities. This study describes familial colpocephaly in two siblings with different fathers in a Dominican family. There were no other neurological problems in their relatives. Child 1 is a 7-year-old girl, who has had partial epileptic seizures since 4 years of age. She attends a mainstream school. She has coloboma and chorioretinic atrophy in her right eye and a right microphthalmia. MRI revealed colpocephaly and hypogenesis of the corpus callosum. Her brother, aged 2 years 8 months showed a mild delay in speech acquisition. He has had three
febrile convulsions
and two non-febrile tonic-clonic seizures since 6 months of age. Neurological and ophthalmological examinations were normal. MRI documented colpocephaly with right occipital horn prevalence. There are only two literature reports of genetically transmitted colpocephaly hypothesised in two identical twins and in two brothers. In the children in this study, a genetic basis for colpocephaly is confirmed. We hypothesised a maternal transmission with
X-linked
or autosomal dominance with an incomplete penetrance model of inheritance.
...
PMID:Colpocephaly in two siblings: further evidence of a genetic transmission. 1079 69
Malformations of the cerebral cortex are an important cause of developmental disabilities and epilepsy. Here we review those malformations for which a genetic basis has been elucidated or is suspected and the types of associated epilepsy. Schizencephaly (cleft brain) has a wide anatomo-clinical spectrum, including partial epilepsy in most patients. Familial occurrence is rare. Heterozygous mutations in the EMX2 gene were reported in 13 patients.
X-linked
bilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia (BPNH) consists of typical BPNH with epilepsy in females and prenatal lethality in males. About 88% of patients have partial epilepsy. Filamin A mutations, all leading to a truncated protein, have been reported in three families and in sporadic patients. The most frequent forms of lissencephaly (agyria-pachygyria) are caused by mutations of LIS1. XLIS mutations cause classical lissencephaly in hemizygous males and subcortical band heterotopia (SBH) in heterozygous females. The thickness of the heterotopic band and the degree of pachygyria correlate with the likelihood of developing Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Mutations of the coding region of XLIS were found in all reported pedigrees and in 38-91% of sporadic female patients with SBH. With few exceptions, children with LIS1 mutations have isolated lissencephaly, with severe developmental delay and infantile spasms. Autosomal recessive lissencephaly with cerebellar hypoplasia, accompanied by severe developmental delay, seizures, and hypotonia has been associated with mutations of the reelin gene. Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy is due to mutations of the fukutin gene and is accompanied by polymicrogyria.
Febrile seizures
and epilepsy with generalized tonic-convulsions appear in about 50% of children but are usually not severe. Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is caused by mutations in at least two genes, TSC1 and TSC2; 75% of cases are sporadic; 60% of patients have epilepsy, manifested in 50% of them as infantile spasms. TSC1 mutations seem to cause a milder disease with fewer cortical tubers and lower frequency of seizures. Among several syndromes featuring polymicrogyria, bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria had familial occurrence on several occasions. Genetic heterogeneity is likely, including autosomal recessive,
X-linked
dominant, X-linked recessive inheritance, and association with 22q11.2 deletions. About 65% of patients have severe epilepsy, often Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.
...
PMID:Epilepsy and genetic malformations of the cerebral cortex. 1157 36