PHOTOSENSITIVITY - GENETICS AND CLINICAL-SIGNIFICANCE

Authors
Citation
H. Doose et S. Waltz, PHOTOSENSITIVITY - GENETICS AND CLINICAL-SIGNIFICANCE, Neuropediatrics, 24(5), 1993, pp. 249-255
Citations number
48
Categorie Soggetti
Pediatrics,Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
0174304X
Volume
24
Issue
5
Year of publication
1993
Pages
249 - 255
Database
ISI
SICI code
0174-304X(1993)24:5<249:P-GAC>2.0.ZU;2-N
Abstract
Photosensitivity is defined by the occurrence of spikes or spikes and waves in response to intermittent light stimulation (= photoparoxysmal response [PPR]). The EEG pattern can show a wide range of expression from solely occipital spikes to generalized irregular spikes and waves . The different types of responses represent different levels of expre ssion of the same genetically determined trait. The photoconvulsive re sponse of Bickford et al (7) is only a subtype of the PPR characterize d by close relation to epilepsy. The average incidence of PPR is 7.6% in healthy children aged 1 to 16 years. Girls are more often affected than boys. The available data provide evidence for autosomal dominant inheritance of photosensitivity. Genetic heterogeneity must be conside red. In studies starting from a neurobiological genetic point of view including the whole spectrum of PPR, the phenomenon could be shown to be a widespread condition being only loosely associated with epilepsy, but more often with symptoms of psychovegetative instability. Only ab out 3% of children with PPR of the given definition will manifest epil epsy up to age 20 years. According to family studies in epileptic and non-epileptic photosensitive probands, the phenotypical expression of the PPR and carriers' risk to manifest epileptic phenomena is decisive ly determined by other pathogenetic factors related to epilepsy. Possi ble interactions of photosensitivity within the multifactorial pathoge netic background of the epilepsies are reviewed.