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Epileptic Encephalopathies as Neurodegenerative Disorders.

The epileptic encephalopathies are severe and often treatment-resistant conditions that are associated with a progressive disturbance of brain function, resulting in a broad range of neurological and non-neurological comorbidities. The concept of epileptic encephalopathies entails that the encephalopathy aspect of the overall condition is primarily driven by the epileptic activity of the disease, which often manifests as specific and pathological features on the electroencephalogram. Genetic factors in epileptic encephalopathies are increasingly recognized. As of 2016, more than 30 genes have been securely implicated as causative genes for genetic epileptic encephalopathies. Even though the traditional concept of epileptic encephalopathies entails that the progressive disturbance of brain dysfunction is primarily due to the abnormal hypersynchronous activity that underlies the seizure disorders, this strict concept rarely holds true for patients with identified genetic etiologies. More commonly, an underlying genetic etiology is thought to predispose both to the neurodevelopmental comorbidities and to the seizure phenotype with a complex interaction between both. In this chapter, we will elucidate to what extent neurodegeneration rather than epilepsy-related regression is a feature of the common epileptic encephalopathies, drawing parallels between two relatively separate fields of neurogenetic research.

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