Abstract

Status epilepticus is a life-threatening medical condition which requires immediate diagnosis and treatment. In children, it may be a recurrent manifestation in the context of heterogeneous severe developmental genetic encephalopathies, as well as the first neurological manifestation. Mutations in several genes have been consistently associated with status epilepticus despite none of them can be considered as ‘pure’ Mendelian status epilepticus gene. Most genetic conditions featuring status epilepticus can be assigned to specific phenotypic subgroups, including cortical dysplasias, inborn errors of metabolism, mitochondrial diseases, or epileptic encephalopathies and childhood syndromes. Next generation sequencing (NGS) has increased the number of genes associated with, and improved the turnaround time for molecular diagnosis of, status epilepticus, allowing more timely and rationale management choices for specific conditions. Next generation sequencing might become part of the standard of care in the near future for a large subset of patients with status epilepticus, especially in early life. At present, trios whole exome sequencing, with a first analysis of point and copy number variants of an in silico panel containing ‘status epilepticus’ genes might represent best choice as it would allow a rapid screening.This article is part of the Special Issue “Proceedings of the 7th London-Innsbruck Colloquium on Status Epilepticus and Acute Seizures"

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