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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
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Aicardi syndrome (AS) is a rare disorder which includes the triad of total or partial agenesis of the corpus callosum, infantile spasms, and chorioretinal anomalies. Seizures and electroencephalogram findings observed in AS are polymorphic with both focal and generalized seizures. We first report on a patient affected by AS who presented with reflex audiogenic seizures specifically triggered by the starting tune of a popular television news. No other type of stimuli, either simple or complex, were able to precipitate the seizures in the patient. The severe cortical-subcortical lesions commonly observed in AS are associated with hyperexcitability of the cortices and may well account for the broad electroclinical patterns noted in this group of patients. From our report, the context of these patterns should be extended to include reflex audiogenic seizures.
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PMID:Intractable reflex audiogenic seizures in Aicardi syndrome. 1708 98

Aicardi syndrome is a congenital disorder characterized by severe psychomotor retardation, corpus callosum agenesis, chorioretinal lacunae, and early-onset infantile spasms. The prognosis is generally poor for children with the classical form. We report a peculiar case of Aicardi syndrome characterized by corpus callosum hypoplasia, brain malformations with subependymal heterotopias, extensive chorioretinal lacunae, seizures, and normal cognitive functions. Therefore, the clinical picture of the syndrome is broader than originally described. Cognitive disorders should not be considered inevitable and the prognosis not ineludibly poor.
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PMID:Aicardi syndrome with favorable outcome: case report and review. 1720 97

Aicardi syndrome is a triad of abnormalities that includes total or partial agenesis of the corpus callosum, chorioretinal lacunae, and infantile spasms. This syndrome was first described in 1965. A female infant with Aicardi syndrome associated with a nasoethmoidal cephalocele is described in this report. She presented with a history of unilateral nasal discharge since birth and seizures since age 1 week. She was microcephalic and there was visual impairment. A fleshy mass of the left nostril was noted. Ophthalmological evaluation revealed left exotropia, dysplastic optic discs and retina, 'morning glory' appearance of the left optic disc, and bilateral chorioretinal lacunae. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showed absence of the corpus callosum, dysmorphic changes of the lateral ventricles, a superiorly located third ventricle, heterotopic grey matter of the frontal lobes, a left nasoethmoidal cephalocele, and closed lip schizencephaly of the left frontal lobe. This female infant developed asymmetric infantile spasms at age 8 weeks. Surgical correction of the cephalocele was declined. She developed recurrent pneumonias secondary to aspiration of feeds and died at age 8 months during one of these events.
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PMID:Aicardi syndrome associated with anterior cephalocele in a female infant. 1751 34

Aicardi syndrome is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by agenesis of the corpus callosum, other developmental brain abnormalities, chorioretinal lacunae, and severe seizures. Current clinical knowledge is derived from small series that focus on these major defects. The authors performed a health survey on a large number of affected children to expand this knowledge and to uncover previously unrecognized features of Aicardi syndrome. Responses received from caregivers of 69 children with Aicardi syndrome met inclusion criteria for data analysis. Ages ranged from 5 months to 32 years (mean, 88 months). All subjects were girls, except for 1 boy with a 47,XXY karyotype. The authors found that the growth rate in Aicardi syndrome slows at age 10 years to below the 5th percentile and that weight gain slows at age 7 years to below the 25th percentile. The median age of survival was estimated at 18.5 (+/-4) years, more favorable than previously reported. The most common complication aside from seizures was gastrointestinal dysfunction, present in >90%. The results from this survey contribute new information on Aicardi syndrome that will benefit clinical management, and collected data will benefit phenotype-driven research toward its underlying cause.
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PMID:Phenotype and management of Aicardi syndrome: new findings from a survey of 69 children. 1762 79

Aicardi syndrome has been defined by the triad of agenesis of the corpus callosum, early seizure onset and lacunar chorioretinopathy. In a nation-wide survey a total of 18 Swedish cases were found. Fourteen girls were re-examined by one of the authors at the ages of 1-27 years. One was seizure free following epilepsy surgery operation, 13 were drug resistant. Two were on ketogenic diet. Most of the girls had multifocal EEG discharges. All except one were severely disabled with severe mental retardation and total dependency on helpers for activities of daily life. Communication, nutrition, and motor function were severely affected areas. Visual function was difficult to evaluate because of mental retardation and lack of co-operation and varied from severely impaired to normal. In one case the appearance of the ocular fundus was documented to have changed with time. One girl was exceptional and seizure free with mild mental retardation. An update by March 2006 showed that 12/18 patients were still alive, at a median age of 13.5 years (range: 3-31 years). Six had died between the ages of 3-10 years. They had all suffered from intractable epilepsy and belonged to the most disabled group. Surprisingly two had died from malignant brain tumours.
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PMID:Aicardi syndrome: follow-up investigation of Swedish children born in 1975-2002. 1805 26

We report the finding of unique astrocytic inclusions in a series of pediatric epilepsy patients, all of whom presented with seizures in their first year of life and had mild-to-moderate developmental delay. All eventually underwent surgical treatment for refractory epilepsy and, on pathological examination, were found to have distinctive, eosinophilic, globular cytoplasmic inclusions confined to cortical astrocytes. These inclusions were almost exclusively juxtanuclear, highly refractile, spared distal subpial, or perivascular astrocytic processes and were strongly and exclusively immunopositive for filamin A, an actin binding protein involved in neuronal migration. Identical inclusions have been identified and characterized in cases of Aicardi syndrome, a rare neurodevelopmental disease. The presence of the same inclusions in the cortex of epilepsy patients, some of whom had concomitant brain anomalies related to migrational problems, prompted us to consider that these patients may lie within a spectrum of disease involving dysfunction of filamin or filamin-interacting proteins. The term "filaminopathy" is tentatively proposed as a distinct pathological entity for this condition in which clinical manifestations range from epilepsy in mildly neurologically impaired patients to severe mental and physical handicap in the Aicardi syndrome. Future studies will be necessary to unravel the exact nature of the filamin A protein or gene aberrations in these patients.
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PMID:Astrocytic inclusions in epilepsy: expanding the spectrum of filaminopathies. 1859 46

This article reports on a female infant with Aicardi syndrome presenting with malignant migrating partial seizures from her first day of life. Initially, unilateral tonic seizures were seen with contralateral ictal electroencephalogram findings. Typically, these tonic seizures were accompanied by head and eye deviation and were followed by a tonic seizure on the other side of the body. At 6 months of age she developed epileptic spasms. She showed no motor development, did not respond to eye contact, and was nasogastric tube-fed. The epilepsy syndrome in this child is refractory to antiepileptic treatment and there is no psychomotor development. This case expands the phenotype of this catastrophic epileptic encephalopathy and suggests that the corpus callosum is not necessary for the 'migration' of partial seizures in this syndrome.
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PMID:Malignant migrating partial seizures in Aicardi syndrome. 1883 92

Aicardi syndrome is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by congenital chorioretinal lacunae, corpus callosum dysgenesis, seizures, polymicrogyria, cerebral heterotopias, intracranial cysts, and costovertebral defects. Cerebellar abnormalities have been described occasionally. Aicardi syndrome is sporadic and has been observed only in females and 47,XXY males. Therefore, it is thought to result from a mutation in an X-linked gene. Improved definition of the clinical phenotype should focus the selection of functional candidate genes for mutation analysis. Because central nervous system abnormalities are the most prominent component of the phenotype, we performed a detailed characterization of abnormalities identified on magnetic resonance neuroimaging studies from 23 girls with Aicardi syndrome, the largest cohort to undergo such review by a single group of investigators. All patients had polymicrogyria that was predominantly frontal and perisylvian and often associated with underopercularization. Periventricular nodular heterotopias, present in all patients, were more frequent than previously reported; 10 had single and 11 had multiple intracranial cysts. Posterior fossa abnormalities were also more frequent than previously described. Cerebellar abnormalities were noted in 95% of studies where they could be evaluated. As a novel finding, we noted tectal enlargement in 10 patients. Since mildly affected girls with variable callosal dysgenesis have now been reported, the constellation of frontal-dominant and perisylvian polymicrogyria, periventricular nodular heterotopias, intracranial cysts, and posterior fossa abnormalities, including tectal enlargement, should prompt consideration of the diagnosis of Aicardi syndrome. We further propose that improved characterization of the neurological phenotype will benefit the selection of candidate genes for mutation analysis.
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PMID:Neuroimaging aspects of Aicardi syndrome. 1892 66

Congenital enlargement of the cerebral ventricles is now commonly recognized in utero due to the availability of high resolution prenatal ultrasonography. It is important to distinguish between congenital hydrocephalus and ventricular enlargement due to malformations, infections or other destructive processes because these disorders can have markedly different prognoses. We report an infant diagnosed with Aicardi syndrome in the newborn period based on brain MRI and ophthalmological findings after she was referred for evaluation of hydrocephalus seen on fetal ultrasound. Aicardi syndrome most commonly comes to medical attention because of seizures later in infancy.
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PMID:Aicardi syndrome mimicking intrauterine hydrocephalus. 1900 86

To determine a management strategy for the epilepsy in children with bilateral cortical malformations, clinical data of 23 patients (age, 3-23 years, M:F=7:16) were retrospectively reviewed. Among these patients, 15 were bedridden and 16 were profoundly retarded and could not even smile. The patients were categorized into the following five groups based on the findings of neuroimaging, seizure types, and electroencephalographic patterns. Group 1: Diffuse cortical malformation with epileptic spasms and secondarily generalized tonic seizures, group 2: diffuse cortical malformation with erratic twitches, group 3: bilaterally extended but not diffuse cortical malformations, group 4: bilateral polymicrogyria with persistent epileptic spasms (Aicardi syndrome), and group 5: bilateral cortical malformation with drop attacks (subcortical band heterotopia and congenital bilateral perisylvian syndrome). Eleven patients suffered from infantile spasms; adrenocorticotropic hormone was effective in group 1 but ineffective in group 4. Treatment of tonic seizures in groups 1-3 and erratic twitching in group 3 with phenobarbital, zonisamide and potassium bromide was beneficial. Epileptic spasms and tonic seizures were prominent in group 4 and were refractory to medical treatment, except that zonisamide, clobazam, and a ketogenic diet were partially or transiently effective. Complex partial and astatic/atonic seizures in group 5 were refractory to medications other than that carbamazepine and clobazam provided limited benefits. Total callosotomy resulted in better seizure control for three patients in group 5, and functional hemispherectomy was effective for one patient in group 4. These results provide the basis for the appropriate choice of medical and surgical treatment for managing bilateral, widespread cortical malformations.
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PMID:Treatment of epilepsy in severely disabled children with bilateral brain malformations. 1903 89


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