Johannsen J, Nickel M, Schulz A, Denecke J. Considering
Valproate as a Risk Factor for Rapid Exacerbation of Complex Movement Disorder
in Progressed Stages of Late-Infantile CLN2 Disease. Neuropediatrics. 2016
Jun;47(3):194-6.
Abstract
Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis type 2 (CLN2 disease, OMIM
204500) is a rare autosomal-recessive lysosomal storage disorder. It is one of
the most common neurodegenerative disorders in childhood. Symptoms include
epilepsy, rapid motor and language regression, dementia, visual loss, and a
complex movement disorder in later stages of the disease. We report on two
children with genetically confirmed late-infantile CLN2 disease who developed a
severe exacerbation of their complex movement disorder leading to hyperthermia,
hyper-CK-emia and decreased level of consciousness over several weeks despite
different therapeutic approaches. Both patients were on long-term antiepileptic
treatment with valproate and only after the withdrawal of valproate, the
movement disorder disappeared and level of consciousness improved. These
observations emphasize that valproate has to be considered as a possible risk factor
in patients in later stages of late-infantile CLN2 disease who develop a
rapidly progressive complex movement disorder.
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