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Benign Rolandic epilepsy or benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (BCECTS) is the most common epilepsy syndrome in childhood. Most children will outgrow the syndrome (it starts around the age of 3-13 with a peak around 8–9 years and stops around age 14-18), hence the label benign.〔 The seizures, sometimes referred to as ''sylvian seizures'', start around the central sulcus of the brain (also called the centrotemporal area, located around the Rolandic fissure, after Luigi Rolando).〔(Benign Rolandic epilepsy ). Retrieved August 8, 2008.〕 == Signs and symptoms == The cardinal features of Rolandic epilepsy are infrequent, often single, focal seizures consisting of: :a. unilateral facial sensorimotor symptoms (30% of patients) :b. oropharyngolaryngeal manifestations (53% of patients) :c. speech arrest (40% of patients), and :d. hypersalivation (30% of patients) Hemifacial sensorimotor seizures are often entirely localised in the lower lip or spread to the ipsilateral hand. Motor manifestations are sudden, continuous or bursts of clonic contractions, usually lasting from a few seconds to a minute. Ipsilateral tonic deviation of the mouth is also common. Hemifacial sensory symptoms consist of unilateral numbness mainly in the corner of the mouth. Hemifacial seizures are often associated with an inability to speak and hypersalivation: ''The left side of my mouth felt numb and started jerking and pulling to the left, and I could not speak to say what was happening to me.'' Negative myoclonus can be observed in some cases, as an interruption of tonic muscular activity Oropharyngolaryngeal ictal manifestations are unilateral sensorimotor symptoms inside the mouth. Numbness, and more commonly paraesthesias (tingling, prickling, freezing), are usually diffuse on one side or, exceptionally, may be highly localised even to one tooth. Motor oropharyngolaryngeal symptoms produce strange sounds, such as death rattle, gargling, grunting and guttural sounds, and combinations: ''In his sleep, he was making guttural noises, with his mouth pulled to the right, ‘as if he was chewing his tongue’''. ''We heard her making strange noises ‘like roaring’ and found her unresponsive, head raised from the pillow, eyes wide open, rivers of saliva coming out of her mouth, rigid.'' Arrest of speech is a form of anarthria. The child is unable to utter a single intelligible word and attempts to communicate with gestures. ''My mouth opened and I could not speak. I wanted to say I cannot speak. At the same time, it was as if somebody was strangling me.'' Hypersalivation , a prominent autonomic manifestation, is often associated with hemifacial seizures, oro-pharyngo-laryngeal symptoms and speech arrest. Hypersalivation is not just frothing: ''Suddenly my mouth is full of saliva, it runs out like a river and I cannot speak.'' Syncope-like epileptic seizures may occur, probably as a concurrent symptom of Panayiotopoulos syndrome: ''She lies there, unconscious with no movements, no convulsions, like a wax work, no life.'' Consciousness and recollection are fully retained in more than half (58%) of Rolandic seizures. ''I felt that air was forced into my mouth, I could not speak and I could not close my mouth. I could understand well everything said to me. Other times I feel that there is food in my mouth and there is also a lot of salivation. I cannot speak.'' In the remainder (42%), consciousness becomes impaired during the ictal progress and in one third there is no recollection of ictal events. Progression to hemiconvulsions or generalised tonic–clonic seizures occurs in around half of children and hemiconvulsions may be followed by postictal Todd’s hemiparesis . Duration and circadian distribution: Rolandic seizures are usually brief, lasting for 1–3 min. Three quarters of seizures occur during nonrapid eye movement sleep, mainly at sleep onset or just before awakening. Status epilepticus: Although rare, focal motor status or hemiconvulsive status epilepticus is more likely to occur than secondarily generalised convulsive status epilepticus, which is exceptional. Opercular status epilepticus usually occurs in children with atypical evolution or may be induced by carbamazepine or lamotrigine. This state lasts for hours to months and consists of ongoing unilateral or bilateral contractions of the mouth, tongue or eyelids, positive or negative subtle perioral or other myoclonus, dysarthria, speech arrest, difficulties in swallowing, buccofacial apraxia and hypersalivation. These are often associated with continuous spikes and waves on an EEG during NREM sleep. Other seizure types: Despite prominent hypersalivation, focal seizures with primarily autonomic manifestations autonomic seizures are not considered part of the core clinical syndrome of Rolandic epilepsy. However, some children may present with independent autonomic seizures or seizures with mixed Rolandic-autonomic manifestations including emesis as in Panayiotopoulos syndrome Atypical forms: Rolandic epilepsy may present with atypical manifestations such early age at onset, developmental delay or learning difficulties at inclusion, other seizure types, atypical EEG abnormalities.〔 These children usually have normal intelligence and development.〔 Learning can remain unimpaired while a child is afflicted with Rolandic epilepsy. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「rolandic epilepsy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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