PEDIATRIC MIGRAINE EQUIVALENTS. CHILDHOOD PERIODIC SYNDROMES. A REVIEW OF LITERATURE AND THE AUTHORS’ CLINICAL OBSERVATIONS
- Authors: Ponyatishin A.E.1, Pal’chik A.B.1, Privorotskaya V.V.1, Glebovskaya O.I.2
-
Affiliations:
- Department of Psychoneurology, Faculty of Advanced and Postgraduate Training, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University, Ministry of Health of Russia
- Saint Olga City Children’s Hospital
- Issue: Vol 11, No 3 (2016)
- Pages: 38-48
- Section: REVIEWS AND LECTURES
- Published: 30.11.2016
- URL: https://rjdn.abvpress.ru/jour/article/view/166
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.17650/2073-8803-2016-11-3-38-48
- ID: 166
Cite item
Full Text
Abstract
Childhood periodic syndromes are a group of functional states occurring at an early age, including in the first year of life, which are pre sently considered as equivalents or precursors for further migraine. Insufficient coverage of the problem in the Russian literature, the paroxysmal occurrence and periodic recurrence of these states are a frequent cause of readmissions, numerous, sometimes invasive studies, misdiagnoses, and, as a consequence, the use of aggressive, pathogenetically unsound therapy, which ultimately affects quality of life in a child. The review article highlights the basic issues of the epidemiology, etiology, pathogenesis, clinical manifestations of major forms of childhood periodic syndromes, as well as approaches to their diagnosis, treatment, and prediction. To familiarize a wide range of specialists, not only neurologists, with these conditions in children will, of course, reduce the overdiagnosis of various more serious diseases.
About the authors
A. E. Ponyatishin
Department of Psychoneurology, Faculty of Advanced and Postgraduate Training, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University, Ministry of Health of Russia
Author for correspondence.
Email: aponyat@mail.ru
Litovskaya St., Saint Petersburg, 194100 Russian Federation
A. B. Pal’chik
Department of Psychoneurology, Faculty of Advanced and Postgraduate Training, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University, Ministry of Health of Russia
Email: fake@neicon.ru
Litovskaya St., Saint Petersburg, 194100 Russian Federation
V. V. Privorotskaya
Department of Psychoneurology, Faculty of Advanced and Postgraduate Training, Saint Petersburg State Pediatric Medical University, Ministry of Health of Russia
Email: fake@neicon.ru
Litovskaya St., Saint Petersburg, 194100 Russian Federation
O. I. Glebovskaya
Saint Olga City Children’s Hospital
Email: fake@neicon.ru
2 Zemledel’cheskaya St., Saint Petersburg, 194156 Russian Federation
References
Supplementary files


