Abstract

To study clinical, electroencephalographic and neuroimaging features in children with epileptic syndromes associated with focal clonic seizures (FCS). We examined 1258 patients with various forms of epilepsy with the onset of seizures from the first day of life to 18 years. FCS was identified in 263 patients (20.9%). FCS were included in the structure of 13 different epileptic syndromes: Rolandic epilepsy (28.1%), structural focal epilepsy (27.5%), structural focal epilepsy associated with benign epileptiform discharges of childhood (SFE-BEDC) (20.6%), focal epilepsy of unknown etiology (7.5%), epilepsia partialis continua (4.6%), pseudo-Lennox syndrome (3.4%), ESES syndrome (2.7%), Landau-Kleffner syndrome (1.5%), Dravet syndrome (1.1%), benign occipital epilepsy (1.1%), benign focal epilepsy in infancy (0.8%), MISF syndrome (0.8%), cognitive epileptiform disintegration (0.8%). In 50% of cases, epilepsy associated with FCS debuts before the age of 5 years (from 1 month to 18 years, average age 4.26±3.9). The groups of syndromes associated with FCS have different prognosis for remission of seizures. Prognostic predictors of seizure remission are: epileptic syndromes associated with BEDC, the presence of periventricular leukomalacia. A severe prognosis for the course of epilepsy is associated with local structural changes in the neocortex. Despite a favorable prognosis for seizures, continued diffuse interictal epileptiform activity with BEDC on the electroencephalogram is a predictor of the onset of cognitive impairment in children.

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