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Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome

Synonyms: childhood epileptic encephalopathy

The syndrome is characterized by multiple types of seizures, mental retardation or regression, and an abnormal EEG with generalized slow spike-and-wave discharges.

  • The most common seizure types are tonic-axial, atonic, and absence seizures, but myoclonic, generalized tonic-clonic, and partial seizures may also occur.1
  • Seizures are often resistant to treatment.
  • Lennox-Gastaut syndrome can be classified as either idiopathic (25% of the total) or symptomatic (75%). In idiopathic, normal psychomotor development occurs prior to the onset of symptoms and no neurological or neuro- radiological abnormalities are found.
  • Symptomatic cases are due to diverse cerebral conditions, which are usually bilateral, diffuse, or multifocal, involving cerebral grey matter.2
  • Examples of underlying disorders responsible for symptomatic Lennox-Gastaut include encephalitis, meningitis, tuberous sclerosis, brain malformations, birth injury, frontal lobe lesions and trauma.
Epidemiology
  • Prevalence is about 2 per 10,000 in Europe
  • The number of children affected is not known with certainty but it may account for about 3% of all childhood epilepsies3
  • Males are affected five times more often than females
Presentation
  • Twenty percent of all patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome have prior infantile spasms with hypsarrythmia.2
  • The mean age of epilepsy onset is 2 years.
  • Young children may show mood instability, personality disturbances, or slowing of psychomotor development.
  • Older children experience personality problems, acute psychotic episodes, or chronic psychosis with aggressiveness, irritability, or social isolation.
  • Mental deterioration leads to apathy and memory disorders.
  • Physical examination can be important in helping to identify specific aetiologies although there are no pathognomonic physical findings.
Differential Diagnosis
  • Epilepsy with mental retardation
  • Infantile spasms
  • Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy
  • Myoclonic-astatic epilepsy
Investigations
  • Electroencephalogram:
    • Interictal EEG is characterized by a slow background that can be either constant or transient.
    • The characteristic interictal EEG pattern is 1.5 to 2.5 Hz slow spike wave activity, which is bilaterally synchronous, dominant over the frontocentral regions, and usually symmetrical.2
    • The characteristic diffuse slow spike wave pattern gradually disappears with age and is replaced by focal epileptic discharges.
  • MRI is important in order to search for an underlying aetiology.
  • Positron emission tomography or single-photon emission computed tomography may be useful during evaluation for epilepsy surgery.
Management

A ketogenic diet appears useful in a minority of patients. Potential serious adverse effects include dehydration, metabolic acidosis when the diet is initiated, renal stones, cardiac abnormalities and an abnormal lipid profile.

Drugs

  • Anticonvulsants are the mainstay of therapy but the optimum treatment for Lennox-Gastaut syndrome remains uncertain.4 A combination of drugs is usually required.
  • Sodium valproate, felbamate, lamotrigine (with or without sodium valproate) and topiramate may be effective;4 ethosuximide is also worth trying for atypical absences.3
  • Benzodiazepines can be effective in the remainder of seizure types but unfortunately the effect is often transient.3
  • Tonic seizures may persist and be more difficult to control over time, while myoclonic and atypical absences appear easier to control.

Surgical

  • Corpus callosotomy is effective in reducing drop attacks but typically is not helpful for other seizure types and is considered palliative rather than curative.
  • Seizure freedom following corpus callosotomy is rare but can occur.
  • Vagus nerve stimulation has been reported to reduce seizure frequency but the results are anecdotal.3
Complications
  • Injuries or death resulting from a seizure.
  • Renal, cardiac, or metabolic complications resulting from a ketogenic diet.
Prognosis
  • Long-term prognosis overall is unfavourable but variable.5
  • A minority of patients can eventually work normally, but many still have typical characteristics (mental retardation, treatment resistant seizures) many years after the onset.
  • A worse prognosis is associated with symptomatic Lennox-Gastaut, early onset of seizures, prior history of infantile spasms, higher frequency of seizures, or constant slow EEG background activity.


Document References
  1. Glauser TA; Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome. Emedicine; April 2006.
  2. Markand ON; Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (childhood epileptic encephalopathy).; J Clin Neurophysiol. 2003 Nov-Dec;20(6):426-41. [abstract]
  3. Robinson R et al; Severe paediatric epilepsy syndromes; E-epilepsy.
  4. Hancock E, Cross H; Treatment of Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.; Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2003;(3):CD003277. [abstract]
  5. Ohtsuka Y, Amano R, Mizukawa M, et al; Long-term prognosis of the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome.; Jpn J Psychiatry Neurol. 1990 Jun;44(2):257-64. [abstract]

Internet and Further Reading Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Colin Tidy for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2007.
DocID: 1450
Document Version: 20
DocRef: bgp1739
Last Updated: 16 Aug 2007
Review Date: 15 Aug 2009














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