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Severe peri-ictal respiratory dysfunction is common in Dravet syndrome
YuJaung Kim, … , Douglas R. Nordli Jr., George B. Richerson
YuJaung Kim, … , Douglas R. Nordli Jr., George B. Richerson
Published January 11, 2018
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2018;128(3):1141-1153. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI94999.
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Research Article Neuroscience

Severe peri-ictal respiratory dysfunction is common in Dravet syndrome

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Abstract

Dravet syndrome (DS) is a severe childhood-onset epilepsy commonly due to mutations of the sodium channel gene SCN1A. Patients with DS have a high risk of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy (SUDEP), widely believed to be due to cardiac mechanisms. Here we show that patients with DS commonly have peri-ictal respiratory dysfunction. One patient had severe and prolonged postictal hypoventilation during video EEG monitoring and died later of SUDEP. Mice with an Scn1aR1407X/+ loss-of-function mutation were monitored and died after spontaneous and heat-induced seizures due to central apnea followed by progressive bradycardia. Death could be prevented with mechanical ventilation after seizures were induced by hyperthermia or maximal electroshock. Muscarinic receptor antagonists did not prevent bradycardia or death when given at doses selective for peripheral parasympathetic blockade, whereas apnea, bradycardia, and death were prevented by the same drugs given at doses high enough to cross the blood-brain barrier. When given via intracerebroventricular infusion at a very low dose, a muscarinic receptor antagonist prevented apnea, bradycardia, and death. We conclude that SUDEP in patients with DS can result from primary central apnea, which can cause bradycardia, presumably via a direct effect of hypoxemia on cardiac muscle.

Authors

YuJaung Kim, Eduardo Bravo, Caitlin K. Thirnbeck, Lori A. Smith-Mellecker, Se Hee Kim, Brian K. Gehlbach, Linda C. Laux, Xiuqiong Zhou, Douglas R. Nordli Jr., George B. Richerson

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Figure 1

Seizures induce ataxic breathing in a patient with DS.

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Seizures induce ataxic breathing in a patient with DS.
(A and B) Irregul...
(A and B) Irregular breathing during and after a seizure. Video frame (A) from Supplemental Video 1 showing region of interest (vertical line pointed to by arrow) used to visualize respiratory movements. Using the methods illustrated in Supplemental Figure 1A, respiratory movements were plotted during and after a generalized seizure (B; traces are contiguous). During the seizure (first 13 seconds), most inspirations had more than one peak. Immediately after the seizure, there was a respiratory pause followed by continued abnormal inspirations lasting until 32 seconds postictal. A normal breathing pattern then resumed with regular, monophasic inspiratory efforts.

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