KnE Life Sciences
ISSN: 2413-0877
The latest conference proceedings on life sciences, medicine and pharmacology.
Cognitive Epileptiform Disintegration in Children
Published date: Nov 01 2018
Journal Title: KnE Life Sciences
Issue title: The Fifth International Luria Memorial Congress «Lurian Approach in International Psychological Science»
Pages: 295–303
Authors:
Abstract:
Cognitive epileptiform disintegration is a specific disease associated with severe epileptiform activity on the EEG in the absence of epileptic seizures accompanied by different developmental cognitive disorders in children. The quantitative and qualitative characteristics of these developmental disorders have changed in the last
10 years. The article presents the analysis of cognitive epileptiform disintegration specificity and the results of the survey that included 57 children aged 2–7 with developmental disorders caused by epileptiform activity that was revealed during video EEG monitoring with sleep deprivation. The children were assessed with
19-channel EEG, synchronized with a video-monitoring system. Recording time was 1–2 hours. The psychometric methods used for the assessment of cognitive functions were three batteries of tests for children according to their age (2 years – MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories, 3–5 years – subtests created in Kazan’ Federal University, 6–7 years – T.V. Akhutina’s methods of neuropsychological diagnosis). The results of the research show that cognitive impairment in children with cognitive epileptiform disintegration aged 2–7 are complex, and predominantly they are the results of general developmental disorders associated with constant strong electrical impact on the functional blocks of the brain. Speech is most severely affected, both expressive and impressive, but speech disorders are always accompanied by the deficit of visual-spatial and kinesthetic analyzers, the deficit of the third functional block development and behavioral (predominantly autism-like) disorders.
Keywords: cognitive epileptiform disintegration, developmental disorders, speech disorders, video EEG monitoring, higher cortical functions, assessment of speech, assessment of cognitive functions
References:
[1] Mukhin, K. Yu. (2012). Cognitive epileptiform is integration: Definition, diagnosis, therapy. Russkij zhurnal detskoj nevrologii, vol. 7, no. 1, pp. 3–20.
[2] Tuchman, R. (1997). Language disorders: Is the EEG clinically useful? International Pediatrics, vol. 12, no. 3, pp. 155–160.
[3] Tuchman, R. F. and Rapin, I. (1997). Regression in pervasive developmental disorders: seizures and epileptiform electroencephalogram correlates. Pediatrics, vol. 99, pp. 560–566.
[4] Gobbi G., Boni A., and Filippini M. (2002). Rolandic epilepsy and related syndromes: A spectrum? Epilepsia, vol. 43, no. 8, p. 32.
[5] Zenkov, L. R. (2007). Neparoksizmal’nye ehpilepticheskie rasstrojstva. Moscow: Medpress-inform.
[6] Ermolenko, N. A., Buchneva, I. A., and Zaharova, E. I. (2014). Klinikonejrofiziologicheskie osobennosti ehpilepticheskih sindromov, associirovannyh s dobrokachestvennymi ehpileptiformnymi razryadami detskogo vozrasta. Nevrologiya, nejropsihiatriya, psihosomatika, S1, pp. 9–12.
[7] Kirilova, L. G., Tkachuk, L. I., Miroshnikov, O. O., et al. (2016). Diagnostic of cognitive epileptiform disintegration with autism spectrum disorders in children of early ages. Perinatologiya i pediatriya, vol. 2, no. 66, pp. 106–111.
[8] Sadekov, I. A., Polyakov, A. V., Sadekova, I. V., et al. (2017). Sindromy narusheniya povedeniya i rechevogo razvitiya, associirovannye s dobrokachestvennymi ehpileptiformnymi patternami detstva na ehlektroehncefalogramme. Russkij zhurnal detskoj nevrologii, vol. 12, no. 1, pp. 36–40.
[9] Gamirova, R. G., Gorobets, E. A., Marulina, V. I., et al. (2017). Developmental disorders in children with cognitive epileptiform disintergration. 4th International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conferences on Social Sciences & Arts SGEM, vol. 2, pp. 107– 115.
[10] Akhutina, T. V. (ed.) (2016). The Methods of Neuropsychological Examination of Children from 6 to 9 Year Old. Moscow: V. Sekachev.
[11] Fenson, L., Dale, P. S., Reznick, J. S., et al. (1993). The MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories: User’s Guide and Technical Manual. Baltimore: Paul H. Brokes Publishing Co.
[12] Eliseeva, M. B., Vershinina, E. A., and Ryskina, V. L. (2016). The MacArthur Inventories: Russian version. Assessment of speech and communication development in children of early age. The norms of development. The samples of analysis. Comments. Ivanovo: LISTOS.
[13] Duvelleroy-Hommet, C., Billard, C., Lucas, B., et al. (1995). Sleep EEG and developmental dysphasia: lack of a consistent relationship with paroxysmal EEG activity during sleep. Neuropediatrics, vol. 26, pp. 14–18.
[14] Echenne, B., Cheminal, R., Rivier, F., et al. (1992). Epileptic electroencephalographic abnormalities and developmental dysphasias: A study of 32 patients. Brain Development, vol. 14, pp. 216–225.
[15] Filippini, M., Boni, A., Giannotta, M., et al. (2013). Neuropsychological development in children belonging to BECTS spectrum: long-term effect of epileptiform activity. Epilepsy & Behavior, vol. 28, pp. 504–511.