Generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus: further heterogeneity in a large family

H Lerche, YG Weber, H Baier, K Jurkat–Rott… - Neurology, 2001 - AAN Enterprises
H Lerche, YG Weber, H Baier, K Jurkat–Rott, O Kraus de Camargo, AC Ludolph, H Bode…
Neurology, 2001AAN Enterprises
Background: Generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+) is a recently described
benign childhood-onset epileptic syndrome with autosomal dominant inheritance. The most
common phenotypes are febrile seizures (FS) often with accessory afebrile generalized
tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS, FS+). In about one third, additional seizure types occur, such as
absences, myoclonic, or atonic seizures. So far, three mutations within genes encoding
subunits of neuronal voltage-gated Na+ channels have been found in GEFS+ families, one …
Background
Generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+) is a recently described benign childhood-onset epileptic syndrome with autosomal dominant inheritance. The most common phenotypes are febrile seizures (FS) often with accessory afebrile generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS, FS+). In about one third, additional seizure types occur, such as absences, myoclonic, or atonic seizures. So far, three mutations within genes encoding subunits of neuronal voltage-gated Na+ channels have been found in GEFS+ families, one in SCN1B (β1-subunit) and two in SCN1A (α-subunit).
Methods
The authors examined the phenotypic variability of GEFS+ in a five-generation German family with 18 affected individuals. Genetic linkage analysis was performed to exclude candidate loci.
Results
Inheritance was autosomal dominant with a penetrance of about 80%. A variety of epilepsy phenotypes occurred predominantly during childhood. Only four individuals showed the FS or FS+ phenotype. The others presented with different combinations of GTCS, tonic seizures, atonic seizures, and absences, only in part associated with fever. The age at onset was 2.8 ± 1.3 years. Interictal EEG recordings showed rare, 1- to 2-second-long generalized, irregular spike-and-wave discharges of 2.5 to 5 Hz in eight cases and additional focal parietal discharges in one case. Linkage analysis excluded the previously described loci on chromosomes 2q21-33 and 19q13. All other chromosomal regions containing known genes encoding neuronal Na+ channel subunits on chromosomes 3p21-24, 11q23, and 12q13 and described loci for febrile convulsions on chromosomes 5q14-15, 8q13-21, and 19p13.3 were also excluded.
Conclusion
These results indicate further clinical and genetic heterogeneity in GEFS+.
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