Symptomatic epilepsy with Panayiotopoulos-like onset: the importance of neuroimaging
*Correspondencia: Dra. Virginia A. Oreña Ansorena. Servicio de Pediatría. Unidad de Neuropediatría. Hospital Universitario Central de Asturias. Avda. Roma, s/n. E-33011 Oviedo (Asturias).
E-mail: vainhoa612@gmail.com
Introduction: Panayiotopoulos syndrome (PS) is a common form of epilepsy in childhood that is classified as one of the benign idiopathic focal epilepsies. There is no consensus on the indication of neuroimaging in the presence of an electroclinical picture consistent with this disorder. Two cases are presented that began with an electroclinical pattern compatible with PS and in which alterations in the occipital structure were finally detected.
Case reports: Two girls aged 5 and 6 years who began with episodes consistent with PS. In both cases neuroimaging showed structural lesions (cortical dysplasia and pleomorphic xanthoastrocytoma), and hence the final diagnosis was occipital symptomatic focal epilepsy, with the ensuing change in the prognosis and treatment.
Conclusions: The literature describes abnormalities in cranial magnetic resonance imaging in 10-20% of diagnosed cases of PS in which a scan is performed, although the diagnosis of PS is not always changed (matching lesions). Both cases exemplify the importance of reaching a correct diagnosis through a detailed study that must include neuroimaging, since, in some patients, causal brain injuries will be detected and as a result the diagnosis, treatment and evolution will be significantly different.
Casos clínicos Dos niñas de 5 y 6 años que comenzaron con episodios compatibles electroclínicamente con SP. En ambos casos, la neuroimagen mostró lesiones estructurales (displasia cortical y xantoastrocitoma pleomórfico), por lo que finalmente el diagnóstico fue de epilepsia focal sintomática occipital, con el consiguiente cambio en el pronóstico y el tratamiento.
Conclusiones En la bibliografía se describen anomalías en la resonancia magnética craneal en un 10-20% de los casos diagnosticados de SP en los que se realiza una prueba de imagen, aunque no siempre se modifica el diagnóstico de SP (lesiones coincidentes). Ambos casos ejemplifican la importancia de alcanzar un diagnóstico correcto mediante un estudio detallado que ha de incluir la realización de neuroimagen, ya que, en algunos pacientes, se detectarán lesiones cerebrales causales, por lo que el diagnóstico, el tratamiento y la evolución serán drásticamente distintos.