pubmed-article:3579476 | pubmed:abstractText | A historical cohort study was undertaken to determine the risk of epilepsy in a population of 18 newborns with neonatal hypoglycemia due to insulin excess. Follow-up was 3 years 8 months (range 7 years-1 year 3 months). Insulin excess was associated with maternal diabetes in 13 infants, with an isolated macrosomia in 2 infants, in one case with probable Langerhans hyperplasia, and in 2 newborns only prolonged beta-sympathomimetic therapy was the possible cause of insulin excess. Newborns with anoxia, brain malformation or small for date were excluded. Two newborns had hypoglycemia with epileptic clonic seizures, but only one was later epileptic. In this case, hypoglycemia was severe and persistent (16 hours). Hyperinsulinism was related to Langerhans hyperplasia. CT scan made at ages one and 6 months showed large hypodensity of the frontal and occipital white matter. Visual evoked responses were also abnormal. Visual evoked responses and CT scan normalized at 1 year. In other children, asymptomatic hypoglycemia (n = 11) or symptomatic hypoglycemia without epileptic seizures (n = 5) did not increase the epileptic risk as none of them had epileptic seizure later on. Thus, seizures associated with neonatal hypoglycemia alone seem to increase the epileptic risk with duration and severity of hypoglycemia being also essential prognostic factors. | lld:pubmed |