CYBERMED LIFE - ORGANIC  & NATURAL LIVING

Epilepsy: With Cerebral Calcifications

  • Coeliac disease, epilepsy and cerebral calcifications.

    Abstract Title:

    Coeliac disease, epilepsy and cerebral calcifications.

    Abstract Source:

    Brain Dev. 2005 Apr ;27(3):189-200. PMID: 15737700

    Abstract Author(s):

    Giuseppe Gobbi

    Article Affiliation:

    Ospedale Maggiore Pizzardi, Unita Operative di Neurologia Infan., Largo Nigrisoli 2, 40133 Bologna, Italy. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

    Abstract:

    Coeliac disease, epilepsy and cerebral calcifications (CEC) syndrome is a rare clinical condition. One hundred and seventy-one patients have been reported in the literature. Patients are mostly from Italy, Spain, and Argentina, suggesting a geographically restricted condition. Epilepsy is more frequently characterized by occipital seizures. It may be benign or drug-resistant, sometime evolving into severe epileptic encephalopathy. Gluten free diet (GFD) efficacy seems to be inversely related to the duration of epilepsy and the young age of the patient. Patients with cerebral calcifications (CC) and coeliac disease (CD) without epilepsy are considered as having an incomplete form of CEC syndrome. Some patients with epilepsy and CC without CD are supposed to have a CEC syndrome with silent or latent CD. Whether CEC syndrome is a genetic condition, or whether epilepsy and/or CC are a consequence of an untreated CD is unknown yet. Since histopathological findings seem to be the expression of vascular calcified malformation, CEC syndrome may be considered a genetically determined entity, such as a type of Sturge-Weber-like phacomatosis. Moreover, CEC, as well as CD, is associated with HLA-DQ2 and HLA-DQ8 phenotype and genotype. The progressive growth and late occurrence of CC before beginning a GFD, the demonstration of anti-gliadin antibodies in the cerebro-spinal fluid and the association with HLA class II genes, suggest that an immune reaction originating from the jejunal mucosa, triggered by gliadin in gluten intolerance predisposed subjects (HLA phenotype) may be responsible for seizures and CC. Moreover, a long-lasting untreated CD folic acid deficiency may cause calcifications. Probably, CEC is considered a genetic, non-inherited, ethnically and geographically restricted syndrome associated with environmental factors.

  • Visual disturbances representing occipital lobe epilepsy in patients with cerebral calcifications and coeliac disease: a case series📎

    Abstract Title:

    Visual disturbances representing occipital lobe epilepsy in patients with cerebral calcifications and coeliac disease: a case series.

    Abstract Source:

    J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2004 Nov;75(11):1623-5. PMID: 15489401

    Abstract Author(s):

    M Pfaender, W J D'Souza, N Trost, L Litewka, M Paine, M Cook

    Article Affiliation:

    Department of Neuroscience, Alfred Hospital, Commercial Road, Melbourne, Victoria 3004, Australia. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

    Abstract:

    Paroxysmal visual manifestations may represent epileptic seizures arising from the occipital lobe. In coeliac disease (CD) bilateral occipital calcifications and seizure semiology consistent with an occipital origin have been described, primarily in Mediterranean countries. By reporting three adult patients from an Australian outpatient clinic with visual disturbances, occipital cerebral calcifications, and CD, this study seeks to emphasise that CD should be considered even when patients of non-Mediterranean origin present with these symptoms. Seizure types included simple partial, complex-partial, and secondarily generalised seizures. The seizure semiology consisted of visual disturbances such as: blurred vision, loss of focus, seeing coloured dots, and brief stereotyped complex visual hallucinations like seeing unfamiliar faces or scenes. Symptoms of malabsorption were not always present. Neurological examination was unremarkable in two patients, impaired dexterity and mild hemiatrophy on the left was noted in one. Routine electroencephalography was unremarkable. In all cases, computed tomography demonstrated bilateral cortical calcification of the occipital-parietal regions. Magnetic resonance imaging showed no additional lesion. All patients had biopsy confirmed CD. Seizure control improved after treatment with gluten free diet and anticonvulsants. This report illustrates the association between seizures of occipital origin, cerebral calcifications, and CD even in patients not of Mediterranean origin.

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