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Prospective study of nesidioblastosis in newborns and infants: Hypoglycemic seizures, epileptogenesis and the significance of the C‐peptide suppression test in pancreatectomy
Author(s) -
IZUMI TATSURO,
TAKESHIGE HIROKO,
ARAI TOSHIHIKO,
SUGAMA MICHIKO,
MIZUSHIMA MIKA,
FUKUYAMA YUKIO,
MABUCHI GENGO
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
pediatrics international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.49
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1442-200X
pISSN - 1328-8067
DOI - 10.1111/j.1442-200x.1997.tb03548.x
Subject(s) - medicine , nesidioblastosis , epileptogenesis , hypoglycemia , epilepsy , anesthesia , pancreatectomy , hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia , electroencephalography , pediatrics , pancreas , insulin , psychiatry
The long‐term follow‐up of chronic hyperinsulinemic seizures, epileptogenesis and other neurological complications in five patients who were treated with conservative therapy followed by pancreatectomy during the neonatal period and infancy, who were confirmed to have diffuse nesidioblastosis are described. The reaction pattern of the C‐peptide (CPR) suppression test and its relation to the final extent of pancreatectomy was examined in four patients. The chronological change in electro‐encephalography (EEG) and its epileptogenesis was also examined in each patient during hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, and during normoglycemia in a long‐term post‐pancreatectomy follow‐up. All patients demonstrated several types of hypoglycemic seizures, ranging from apnea, erratic seizures, partial seizures evolving to generalized/unilateral tonic‐clonic or tonic seizures, myoclonic seizures and EEG abnormalities. Four of five patients still suffered from epilepsy at the age of 4–22 years. The reaction pattern of the CPR suppression test showed dichotomy, with a hyper‐reactive pattern in two patients who required total pancreatectomy to control hypoglycemia, and a suppression pattern in two other patients treated with 90–95% pancreatectomy. Neonatal onset and subsequent myoclonic seizures were ominous signs of epileptogenesis to various types of intractable epilepsy and other neurological sequelae. A prompt diagnosis and pancreatectomy of a sufficient extent at the first operation are essential. The CPR suppression test may be useful for a prompt diagnosis and selection of the extent of pancreatectomy.

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