Before I begin the
"CDKL5 seizure guide", I will introduce you to some common epilepsy
terms.
- EEG:
     Electroencephalogram: a test that measures and records electrical activity
     of the brain
 - Abnormal
     EEG: When there are changes to the normal pattern of brain activity
 - Hypsarrhythmia: is an abnormal pattern on the EEG occurring
     in-between seizure activity, frequently encountered in an infant diagnosed
     with infantile spasms
 - Infantile Spasms: Clusters of short spasms
     that last several seconds and chaotic brain wave patterns on the EEG
 - Tonic seizure: tone increases and arms/legs
     stiffen and straighten
 - Refractory epilepsy: seizures that are not
     controlled with anti-epilepsy medications
 
The "CDKL5 seizure
guide" can be broken down into three phases.  Early
Epilepsy, Epileptic Encephalopathy, Late Multifocal and Myoclonic Epilepsy;
Phase 1, Phase 2, and Phase 3 respectively. 
Phase 1
- Brief
     seizures beginning between 1-10 weeks old
 - these seizures are less than 1 minute long
 - can occur frequently
 - approximately 2-5 a day
 - The
     background of the EEG is normal in majority of cases except when a seizure
     is occurring
 
 “Typical" Development for a
child with CDKL5 mutation at this time
- poor eye contact
 - low muscle tone
 
Phase 2
- Infantile
     spasms 
 - Brief
     tonic seizures
 - Hypsarrythmia
 
 “Typical" Development for a
child with CDKL5 mutation at this time
- profound mental delays
 - low muscle tone
 - no language or visual interaction
 - no developmental progress
 
Phase 3
- Severe
     refractory epilepsy even with the use of anti-epileptic medications
 - varied
     types of seizures 
 
 “Typical" Development for a
child with CDKL5 mutation at this time
- profound
     mental delays
 - low
     muscle tone
 - no
     language or visual interaction
 - slow
     developmental progress
 
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** It is unclear if every child with a CDKL5 mutation will follow the course mentioned in this post...this is based off of recent studies done on seizures and children with CDKL5 mutations.
----
** It is unclear if every child with a CDKL5 mutation will follow the course mentioned in this post...this is based off of recent studies done on seizures and children with CDKL5 mutations.
----
How does this relate to Sonya?
Right now we are finding ourselves
in a sort of "holding pattern".  We seem to be in-between Phase
1 and Phase 2.  Sonya has "epileptic spasms", which are similar
to the infantile spasms but with no hypsarrythmia.  She also has tonic
seizures.  Typically she will have a seizure every 24-48 hours that lasts
less than 3 minutes.  Occasionally this "one" seizure will
present itself as a tonic seizure lasting 1 minute and then immediately
followed by spasms lasting from 1-2 minutes.  During the spasms she has
between 5-25 seizures within those 2-3 minutes.
There is a 50% chance that Sonya
will never have the abnormal hypsarrythmia background. The treatment "options" we will be given at that time do not have a 100% success rate of eliminating the abnormal background, and the side effects can be fatal.  I will save that information for another days post.
I would much rather leave you with
this gem.
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