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The Hemiconvulsions-Hemiplegia-Epilepsy (HHE) syndrome: a transcranial magnetic stimulation-EEG study.

Hippokratia 2017 April
BACKGROUND: The Hemiconvulsions-Hemiplegia-Epilepsy (HHE) syndrome is currently regarded as an extremely rare condition. The etiological and pathophysiological mechanisms underlying this medical rarity as well as the optimal therapeutic approaches remain poorly defined and understood. We present the clinical, radiological and electroencephalography (EEG) findings of a patient with the HHE syndrome and describe the response of the continuously present epileptiform abnormalities to transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS).

CASE DESCRIPTION: A 33-year old male patient was referred to our department for investigation and management of intractable epilepsy. His seizures began at the age of three months when, during the course of a common febrile illness, he developed repetitive clonic seizures involving the left upper and lower limbs, followed by permanent left hemiplegia. After extensive investigations, he was diagnosed with "idiopathic" HHE syndrome. Currently, he suffers from left hemiplegia, severe intellectual impairment [Intelligence Quotient (IQ) <30] and asymmetric, bilateral tonic seizures occurring 1-3 times daily despite treatment with valproate, topiramate, lamotrigine, rufinamide, and perampanel. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed atrophy of the right hemisphere and serial EEGs disclosed continuous sharp waves, the generators of which were localized by electrical source imaging (ESI) to two distinct sources within the right hemisphere. Repetitive TMS [210 stimuli of 1 Hz at 100 % corticomotor threshold applied with a circular coil over the generators of epileptic discharges (EDs)] resulted in a statistically significant decrease of ED counts compared to sham stimulation and the post-verum TMS period.

CONCLUSION: We present the clinical-laboratory profile and the long-term follow up of a patient with the HHE syndrome. Further, we describe the effects of TMS on EDs. The latter observation raises the possibility that TMS-EEG may be used in select cases with intractable epilepsy as a surrogate marker of responsiveness to more invasive modalities (i.e., cortical stimulation). HIPPOKRATIA 2017, 21(2): 101-104.

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