Pediatric Neurology
Volume 12, Issue 2 , Pages 132-135, February 1995

Changes of P300 latency with age in childhood epilepsy

From the Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine; Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University; Toyama City, Japan

Received 6 July 1994; accepted 16 December 1994.

Abstract 

Auditory event-related potentials (P300 latency; odd-ball paradigm) were examined in 129 patients with childhood epilepsies and 53 controls. The P300 latency in the patients with epilepsies (373 ± 39.4 ms) was significantly longer than in controls (356 ± 38.4), and the prolongation was greatest in the patients with symptomatic partial epilepsies (390 ± 40.5), mild in those with idiopathic generalized epilepsies (370 ± 24.3), and minimum in those with idiopathic partial epilepsies (363 ± 28.9). Abnormal P300 latency occurred at all ages during childhood in patients with symptomatic partial epilepsies, and at older ages in patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsies. The shortening of latency with age was relatively small in patients with epilepsies compared with controls. These results suggest that the prolongation of P300 latency (i.e., existence of cognitive disturbance) displays characteristic changes with age in each epileptic syndrome.

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PII: 0887-8994(95)00001-V

Pediatric Neurology
Volume 12, Issue 2 , Pages 132-135, February 1995