Late infantile epileptic encephalopathy: A distinct developmental and epileptic encephalopathy syndrome.
Shawn KackerChalongchai PhitsanuwongAudrey OetomoDouglas R NordliPublished in: Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape (2023)
Late infantile epileptic encephalopathy (LIEE) is characterized by several unique clinical and electrographic features. Typically, LIEE manifests in patients during the second year of life and occurs before two years of age, hence late infantile onset. The condition is commonly observed in infants with symptomatic epilepsy. Myoclonic-tonic and spasm-tonic seizures are the quintessential seizure types. The inter-ictal EEG exhibits more organization and lower voltages than seen with hypsarrhythmia and lacks the defining EEG characteristics of EIDEE, IESS, or LGS. We propose that LIEE is a distinct electroclinical syndrome within the spectrum of developmental and epileptic encephalopathies.