Inborn errors of metabolism and epilepsy: Current understanding, diagnosis, and treatment approaches

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Abstract

Inborn errors of metabolism (IEM) are a rare cause of epilepsy, but seizures and epilepsy are frequently encountered in patients with IEM. Since these disorders are related to inherited enzyme deficiencies with resulting effects on metabolic/biochemical pathways, the term “metabolic epilepsy” can be used to include these conditions. These epilepsies can present across the life span, and share features of refractoriness to anti-epileptic drugs, and are often associated with co-morbid developmental delay/regression, intellectual, and behavioral impairments. Some of these disorders are amenable to specific treatment interventions; hence timely and appropriate diagnosis is critical to improve outcomes. In this review, we discuss those disorders in which epilepsy is a dominant feature and present an approach to the clinical recognition, diagnosis, and management of these disorders, with a greater focus on primarily treatable conditions. Finally, we propose a tiered approach that will permit a clinician to systematically investigate, identify, and treat these rare disorders.

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Sharma, S., & Prasad, A. N. (2017, July 1). Inborn errors of metabolism and epilepsy: Current understanding, diagnosis, and treatment approaches. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms18071384

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