Abstract

Epilepsy is a major morbidity in Sturge Weber syndrome, a segmental vascular neurocutaneous disorder classically associated with facial angiomas, glaucoma, and leptomeningeal capillary-venous type vascular malformations. The extent of the latter correlates with neurological outcome. Post-zygotic mosaicism for the activating mutation p.R183Q of the GNAQ gene has been identified as the major cause. GNAQ encodes for an alpha subunit of a heterotrimeric G protein critical to blood vessel development. The earlier the timing of the mutation in development, the more severe the involvement, e.g. from isolated port-wine stains to the full syndrome. The strongest predictors of adverse outcomes are MRI and the presence of angiomas involving any part of the forehead, delineated inferiorly from the outer canthus of the eye to the top of the ear, and including the upper eyelid. The neurological course may be progressive and the typical constellation of symptoms is focal onset seizures, hemiparesis, headache, stroke-like episodes, behavior problems, intellectual disability, and visual field deficits. Antiseizure medications are effective in about half of patients. The presence of localized seizures, focal neurological deficits, and drug resistant epilepsy indicate epilepsy surgical evaluation. Earlier seizure onset, i.e. before six months of age, is associated with a more severe course with significant residual deficits. Factors contributing to epileptogenesis include decreased brain tissue perfusion due to abnormal venous drainage, anoxic injury contributing to cerebral calcification, breakdown of the blood-brain barrier, and the presence of developmental cortical malformations. Pre-symptomatic prophylactic treatment may be a future option to modify the course of the disease including the associated epileptogenesis.

Highlights

  • The phakomatoses or neurocutaneous syndromes comprise a heterogeneous group of diseases that are mostly hereditary and characterized by the association of skin lesions with a variety of central and/or peripheral nervous system manifestations

  • Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) is a segmental vascular neurocutaneous disorder classically associated with facial angiomas known as port-wine stains, glaucoma associated with vascular ocular abnormalities, and leptomeningeal capillary-venous type vascular malformations

  • Seizures occur in 75–80% of all SWS patients and in over 90% of patients with bilateral involvement

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Summary

Introduction

The phakomatoses or neurocutaneous syndromes comprise a heterogeneous group of diseases that are mostly hereditary and characterized by the association of skin lesions with a variety of central and/or peripheral nervous system manifestations. The authors studied the prevalence and clinical correlates of focal increases in cerebral glucose metabolism with seizure onset as well as evolution to drug-resistant epilepsy. Decreased blood flow during seizures, can be observed These findings point to the variable results of functional studies in SWS that might lead to miscalculation of the lesioned area while planning for surgery[30]. The authors used MR perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) of the affected cerebral white matter to study dynamic perfusion abnormalities in children with SWS They concluded that increased perfusion in mostly younger patients may represent a transient phenomenon before severe brain atrophy occurs in the affected brain regions. Prospective data show that prominent calcification in the affected hemisphere reflects markedly decreased perfusion in underlying white matter and is associated with more severe epilepsy in SWS patients[33]. Grant information The author(s) declared that no grants were involved in supporting this work

11. Comi AM
Findings
PubMed Abstract

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