Myoclonic epilepsy is a form of epilepsy that is mainly characterised by myoclonus, i.e. rapid and brief muscle contractions that may affect one part of the body or be more diffuse. These contractions may appear as small spasms or tremors and occur without warning.
This type of epilepsy can occur in different forms and at different ages. For example, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, which usually begins between the ages of 12 and 18, is characterised by myoclonus that can occur during the day and is often accompanied by other seizures such as tonic-clonic seizures, which involve the whole body, or absence seizures, in which there is a brief loss of consciousness without obvious convulsions.
In some cases, myoclonic epilepsy may also occur in adulthood and may be associated with other neurological conditions or more complex disorders. The main symptoms include myoclonias and sometimes tonic-clonic or absence seizures.
34 genes
Not known
Multigenic panel aimed at the molecular diagnosis of myoclonic epilepsies.
Method: NGS sequencing, determination of SNVs (Single Nucleotide Variants), small insertions and deletions and CNVs (Copy Number Variants).
Limits: The test is unable to determine the presence of underrepresented somatic events, balanced chromosomal rearrangements, nucleotide expansion events of repeat regions, CNVs <3 contiguous exons. <3 esoni contigui.
Some genes may have low coverage areas, where necessary or upon specific request, within the limits of methodological limitations, sequencing can be completed with alternative methods (Sanger).
Some genes may be duplicated in the genome (pseudogenes), which may invalidate the analysis.
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