Radiographic and Tomographic Study of the Cranial Bones in Children with the Idiopathic Type of West Syndrome.
Ali Al KaissiSergey O RyabykhFarid Ben ChehidaHamza Al KaissiVasileios DougalesVladimir M KenisFranz GrillPublished in: Pediatric reports (2024)
The aim of this study was sixfold: firstly, to refute the common usage of the term idiopathic; secondly, we feel that it could be possible that West syndrome is a symptom complex rather than a separate diagnostic entity; thirdly, to further detect the genetic carrier, we explored the connection between the cranial bones in children with West syndrome with what has been clinically observed in their parents; fourthly, the early life anatomical disruptions of the cranial bones among these children seem to be heterogeneous; fifthly, it shows that the progressive deceleration in the development of this group of children is highly connected to the progressive closure of the cranial sutures; sixthly, we affirm that our findings are novel.