Last updated 28 Jul 2009, review date due 10 Mar 2012
This is a newly-described epilepsy starting in very early childhood. It is also called:
- migrating partial seizures of infancy
- malignant migrating partial seizures in infancy.
It seems to be a very rare type of epilepsy.
Most children start having seizures in the first few weeks of life. All children will start having seizures by six months of age.
Symptoms
Different things happen in the seizures.
- The eyes may turn or deviate to the left or to the right.
- There may be some stiffness of the body, arms or legs (either affecting one side of the body or both sides of the body).
- The face may become very flushed (very red) and there is often a lot of drooling (salivation).
- There may be lots of tears in the eyes (but the child does not always appear upset).
- There may be chewing or some very brief cycling movements of the arms or legs.
All of these seizures are called partial seizures. Sometimes these seizures may then progress into secondarily generalised seizures – and these are called tonic-clonic seizures. This more commonly affects older children (aged two years and above).
The seizures may occur only infrequently (now and then) in the first few weeks after the epilepsy starts. However, very rapidly, the seizures increase in frequency to the point where they may occur 10, 20 or even 50 (or more) times a day, every day.
When the seizures start in infancy they usually last only 30 seconds or up to one minute. In older children the seizures may last many minutes.
No cause has been found to explain this type of epilepsy. All tests, including brain scans, blood and urine tests, skin and muscle biopsies and genetic tests are usually normal. It is not due to any ‘birth injury’ and it does not seem to run in families.
It is possible that a child’s development may show some progress if the seizures can be controlled for a number of months. However, this is very rare. Even if some development does occur, the child’s developmental will not ‘catch up’. They will still have learning difficulties. The learning difficulties are usually severe.
Diagnosis
The diagnosis is made by taking a very careful account of the seizures, especially at what age the seizures started and descriptions of the seizures.
The EEG may be very helpful, especially if the child has seizures during the EEG. This will show that the seizures come from different parts of the brain. This is why it is called ‘migrating’ partial epilepsy of infancy (as the seizures ‘migrate’ or move from one part of the brain to another).
Treatment
It is unlikely that any anti-epileptic medication will ever control the seizures. Sometimes a medication called stiripentol may be helpful but only for a brief period.
Other treatments have also been used but with very little success. These have included the ketogenic diet, steroids (prednisolone) and intravenous immunoglobulins.
It is possible that the very oldest anti-epileptic drug bromide may control some of the seizures in some children. However, bromide may cause unpleasant side effects and must therefore be used very carefully.
Prognosis (outlook)
The prognosis or outcome is usually very poor. This is because the seizures never come under control for more than a few days or a week at a time. Sometimes they are never controlled. This means that they continue to happen every day.
In addition, most children show very little developmental progress. No child with this condition has ever shown a completely normal development.
Support organisation
Contact a Family, 209-211 City Road, London, EC1V 1JN, telephone 0808 808 3555, www.cafamily.org.uk
Epilepsy Action is indebted to Dr Richard Appleton, a Consultant Paediatric Neurologist who specialises in children’s epilepsy, and to Dr Rachel Kneen, Consultant Paediatric Neurologist and Dr Stewart Macleod, Specialist Registrar in paediatric neurology, at Alder Hey at Alder Hey Children’s Hospital, Liverpool, who have kindly prepared the information on this page.
Because this page is written by an epilepsy healthcare professional and not by Epilepsy Action, it falls outside the requirements of the Information Standard. This is why the Information Standard logo is not shown on this page.
We can provide references and information on the source material we use to write our epilepsy advice and information pages. Please contact our Epilepsy Helpline by email at helpline@epilepsy.org.uk.
- Information for...
- Information on...
- Fundraise
- Donate
- Membership
- Campaigns
- Take epilepsy action campaign
- Automatic substitution of anti-epileptic drugs
- National commissioning of paediatric epilepsy surgery
- National Epilepsy Week
- Save our Sapphires, protecting all epilepsy specialist nurse posts
- Women's campaigns
- Epilepsy in England: time for change
- 'Epilepsy Aware' scheme for GP practices and pharmacies
- Campaign Supporters' Group
- Surveys
- News
- Research
- Our services
- Forum
- About us
Epilepsy advice and information
- What is epilepsy?
- Caring for a baby or young child when you have epilepsy: a detailed guide
- Children
- Depression and epilepsy
- Developing epilepsy in later life
- Driving and epilepsy
- Education
- Entitlements and benefits for people with epilepsy
- Epilepsy and learning disabilities
- Epilepsy and Travel abroad
- Epilepsy information for prisons
- Epilepsy, osteoporosis and osteomalacia
- Epilepsy: diagnosis, treatment and healthcare in the UK
- Epileptic seizures explained
- Flu and epilepsy
- Identity jewellery
- Inheritance
- Me and my dad
- Memory
- Mobile phones and epilepsy
- Photosensitive epilepsy
- Safety advice for people with epilepsy
- Sports and leisure
- Stress and epilepsy
- Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP)
- Syndromes
- Aicardi syndrome
- Angelman syndrome
- Benign epilepsy of childhood with occipital paroxysms (BECOP)
- Benign myoclonic epilepsy in infancy
- Benign neonatal convulsions
- Benign partial epilepsy in infancy
- Benign rolandic epilepsy
- Childhood absence epilepsy (CAE)
- Early myoclonic encephalopathy
- Electrical status epilepticus during slow-wave sleep (ESESS)
- Epilepsy with myoclonic absences
- Eyelid myoclonia with absences (EMA)
- Gelastic Epilepsy
- Generalised epilepsy with febrile seizure plus (GEFS+)
- Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME)
- Landau Kleffner Syndrome
- Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome
- Migrating partial epilepsy in infancy
- Myoclonic astatic epilepsy (Doose syndrome)
- Ohtahara Syndrome
- Panayiotopoulos syndrome
- Pyridoxine dependency
- Rasmussen syndrome
- Rett syndrome
- Ring chromosome 20 syndrome
- Severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (SMEI)
- Sturge-Weber syndrome
- Unverricht-Lundborg syndrome
- West syndrome (infantile spasms)
- The Disability Discrimination Act
- The Equality Act and epilepsy
- Vagus nerve stimulation therapy in epilepsy
- Work and epilepsy
- Women and epilepsy
- Young people and epilepsy
- Epilepsy Action and the Information Standard
- The Epilepsies: You, Epilepsy and the NICE Guideline
- Epilepsy Action Information Reviewers (EAIRs)
- Technical editing/writing and copyright
Epilepsy Helpline
- UK freephone 0808 800 5050
- International +44 113 210 8850
- Email: helpline@epilepsy.org.uk
- Twitter: epilepsyadvice
- Txt msg: 0753 741 0044 info







