Benign Rolandic Epilepsy Flashcards

1
Q

Semiology of a benign rolandic epilepsy seizure

A
  • Onset:
    • Classically occurs when falling asleep or awakening from sleep
  • Features:
    • Clonic or tonic activity of one side of the lower face
    • Paresthesia of the tongue, lips, gum, and cheek
    • Drooling and arrest of speech or dysarthria
    • May or may not subsequently generalize
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2
Q

Epidemiology of onset for benign rolandic epilepsy/benign epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes

A
  • Most common focal epilepsy of childhood
  • Age of onset between 3-10 years
  • Resolves spontaneously by age 18
  • Family history is often present
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3
Q

Peri-rolandic region of the brain

A
  • The Rolandic fissure is another name for the central sulcus
  • Rolandic epilepsy gets its name because of its focal involvement of the motor and sensory strip
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4
Q

EEG in rolandic epilepsy/BECTS

A

Inter-ictally, it is characterized by the presence of “centrotemporal” or “perirolandic” spikes

These may be unilateral or bilateral

They become more prominent during sleep.

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5
Q

Treatment of benign rolandic epilepsy

A
  • Most patients experience only one or less than a handful of seizures, and will grow out of the disease by age 18
  • Studies recommend withholding treatment (watchful waiting) unless there were multiple seizures, cognitive changes, quality-of-life changes, and generalized tonic-clonic seizures
  • Treatment is with levetiracetam, carbamazepine, or phenytoin
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6
Q

The most common focal epilepsy in children is ___.

The most common focal epilepsy in adults is ___.

A

The most common focal epilepsy in children is benign rolandic epilepsy.

The most common focal epilepsy in adults is temporal lobe epilepsy.

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7
Q

“Malignant rolandic epilepsy”

A

Seizures look similar to typical BECTS, but are frequent, difficult to treat, and do not spontaneously remit by 16 years of age.

It is likely that these patients have a different syndrome rather than a severe form of BECTS.

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