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Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this cross-sectional study is to learn about autonomic cardiac profile changes in children with self-limiting focal epilepsy using levetiracetam and carbamazepine in children with self-limiting focal epilepsy syndrome. The main questions is it aims to answer are: 1. Are heart rate variability and autonomic tone different among healthy controls and children with epilepsy? 2. Does Levetiracetam and carbamazepine affect autonomic tone differently among children with self-limiting focal epilepsy?


Clinical Trial Description

Seventy-eight children with self-limiting focal epilepsy syndrome were enrolled in the study and were divided into two groups. Group I consisted of children with epilepsy who were only taking one type of ASM, either levetiracetam or carbamazepine. They were further subdivided into group Ia, which included patients receiving levetiracetam, and group Ib, which included patients receiving carbamazepine. Group II comprised forty-one age and sex-matched healthy children as a control group. The pediatric neurologist utilized the clinical definition criteria of the International League Against Epilepsy to diagnose all children with self-limiting focal epilepsy syndrome. The demographics, clinical data, neuroimaging findings, interictal scalp EEG results, and outcomes of patients' medical records were examined retrospectively. Utilizing the 10-20 system, gold cup electrodes (accompanied by conductive paste and collodium) were placed and used to acquire scalp recordings. Polygraphic derivations generally include an ECG channel, standard EEG recordings, plus an optional EMG channel. All subjects had echocardiographic (ECHO) testing using M-mode, 2-dimensional, color, pulse, and continuous wave Doppler echocardiograms with a GE Vivid S6. A standard ambulatory electrocardiography (ECG) recording system (Cardioline Click Holter HRV Package System, version 1.4.1 Biomedical Systems, Italy) was used. All of the patients were examined during an at least 24- hour seizure-free period, and none of the patients reported seizures during the recording period and encouraged to perform their normal daily activities. Artifacts and ectopic complexes were excluded. Heart rate variability parameters used for the time domain analysis were the mean and the highest and lowest heart rates. Time domain analysis included the following: standard deviation (SD) of all normal RR intervals (SDNN, ms), SD of the average normal sinus intervals between successive heartbeats (RR intervals) for all 5 min segments of the entire recording (SDANN, ms), the root mean squares successive differences RR intervals (RMSSD, ms), the proportion of the adjacent RR intervals that differ by more than 50 ms in the 24- hour recording (pNN50, measured in percentage). While the RMSSD and pNN50 reflect vagally mediated (i.e., parasympathetic) HRV, the SDNN represents the parasympathetic and sympathetic components of the autonomic nervous system. The rSUDEP-7 inventory was used to assess group I risk for SUDEP. The SUDEP-7 was found to be associated with a biomarker of vagus-mediated HRV(RMSSD)[25]. The revised SUDEP-7 Risk Inventory incorporates seven validated risk factors (Table 1). Since our study cohort consisted of the pediatric age group and the study design was based on patients receiving monotherapy, none of group 1 received points from the 5th and 6th items of the risk factor list. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06138847
Study type Observational
Source Ege University
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase
Start date January 1, 2023
Completion date December 2, 2023