KUMJ | VOL. 15 | NO. 3 | ISSUE 59 | JULY-SEPT. 2017
Hemiconvulsion-Hemiplegia-Epilepsy Syndrome in a Girl Presented with Complex Partial Seizures
Joshi A, Shrestha PS, Dangol S, Shrestha NC, Poudyal P, Shrestha A
Abstract: The mechanisms underlying the Hemiconvulsion-Hemiplegia-Epilepsy syndrome
remains unclear. The current proposed pathogenic mechanism is a neuronal injury
induced by venous thrombosis and/or hypoxia. Children develop hemispheric
brain atrophy with contralateral hemiplegia, epilepsy, and a variable degree of
cognitive deficit. We report a 33 months old female child a case of hemiconvulsionhemiplegia-epilepsy
syndrome
with right
hemisphere
unilateral
brain
edema
and
left sided hemiplegia and aphasia who presented with left upper extremities
complex partial seizures with generalization to tonic clonic seizures and developed
status epilepticus that posed diagnostic and therapeutic challenges. Progressive
atrophy of the right cerebral hemisphere was noted after 3 months of follow up.
Hemiconvulsion-Hemiplegia-Epilepsy syndrome should be suspected in a child
with unilateral cerebral hemisphere brain edema and hemiplegia with cognitive
deficit following status epilepticus to provide patients and families with an accurate
prognosis regarding the subsequent development of epilepsy.
Keyword : Hemiconvulsion-Hemiplegia-Epilepsy syndrome, Hemispheric brain atrophy, Status epilepticus, Unilateral brain edema