Guest guest Posted February 21, 2012 Report Share Posted February 21, 2012 Thank you, yes that's very helpful. I'll look into Chez in more detail although from what you said it doesn't sound like they will prescribe aeds. Somwhere I read they also mentioned steroids. Do you think they might suggest that or unlikely? Weve discussed doing some with Breakspear to address inflammation, which chez also discuses I think. Do you have any idea what they might suggest other than repeating EEG ( which was an awful experience!) Thanks also for pointer to ketogenic diet. I'll read up on it. Thanks again, nah > > The Chez series from Chicago is really the only large-scale study that reports Jtreating epileptiform EEG abnormalities in children with ASD who have not presented with actual seizures. I don't think it is standard practice in the UK anywhere at present to suggest such proactive use of AEDs. > > There is of course also an overlap with the use of ketogenic diet both in control of seizures and in work with ASD. I did reference material on this in my ASD diet book. > > Hope this helps. > > Ken > > > ________________________________ > > To: Autism-Biomedical-Europe > Sent: Tuesday, 21 February 2012, 18:40 > Subject: Re: Epileptiform activity without seizures > > >  > My son has actual seizures for 15 months now and apart from sedated EEG we > have not been offered anything, not even a Dx. I asked for referral to Paed > Neuro which is going to be at end of May. I already decided which AED I want if > they suggest it, I think most important thing is not to get the kids on a > lifetime regime, I said no improvement in child (not tests) in 6 month I want > him off it. School nurse said that is much more common way to work these days. > We do TST and I am hopeful that will sort issue in the long term. > I am told that the right AED's can promote expressive language, I Have all > my bits crossed for that side effect! > Mx >  > In a message dated 21/02/2012 14:51:31 GMT Standard Time, > susannah_miles@... writes: >  > >We had our gosh metabolics referral and blood and urines pointed no abnormalities ( meaning inborn). But EEG showed abnormal Epileptiform activity which has got us a referral to neurology. > > > >So Knowing absolutely > nothing about this ive done some Googling and it seems it's not uncommon in > asd (Epileptiform activity especially during sleep, normal MRI, no seizures). > Chez comes up amongst others. > > > >From my very limited reading I > learnt that treatment can include AEDs, steroids or even surgery! > > > >Just > wondering if anyone had ever had similar results, where it lead them and what > treatment was offered on nhs? > >I'm trying to anticipate what will be > discussed at appointment . > > > >Many thanks for any thoughts. > nah > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.