Lifetime prognosis of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessDate
2013Author
Baykan, BetulMartinez-Juarez, Iris E.
Altindag, Ebru A.
Camfield, Carol S.
Camfield, Peter R.
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Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) is among the most common types of genetic epilepsies, displaying a good prognosis when treated with appropriate drugs, but with a well-known tendency to relapse after withdrawal. The majority of patients with JME have continuing seizures after a follow-up of two decades. However, 17% are able to discontinue medication and remain seizure-free thereafter. Clinicians should remember that there is a small but still considerable subgroup of JME patients whose seizures are difficult to treat before informing patients with newly-diagnosed JME about their "benign" prognosis. This resistant course is not fully explained, though there are many suggested factors. The dominating myoclonic seizures disappear or diminish in severity in the fourth decade of life. Despite the favorable seizure outcome in most of the cases, 3/4 of patients with JME have at least one major unfavorable social outcome. The possible subsyndromes of JME, its genetic background, and its pathophysiological and neuroimaging correlates should be further investigated. This article is part of a supplemental special issue entitled Juvenile Myodonic Epilepsy: What is it Really? (c) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.