Laughing spells and precocious puberty in a child
| HOSP # | Faku, A RXH 155717598 | WARD | Endocrine clinic |
| CONSULTANT | Jody Rusch / Amith Ramcharan | DOB/AGE | 5y female |
Abnormal Result
Abnormal inexplicable lauging spells: Gelastic seizures
Presenting Complaint
The patient, a 5y female presented to the medical emergency departement with status epilepticus, more accurately described as gelastic seizures: laughing for no apparent reason.
These seizures was eventually controlled with multiple anti-convulsants: 2 doses of midazolam, phenobarbital and a loading dose of phenytoin. The seizures have resolved just before the clinicians wanted to initiate Lucrin.
History
No previous medical history of note. This was the first presentation of the child to hospital with disease.
Examination
Unusual findings:
- Tanner III breasts – confirmed by an Endocrinologist
- Height Taller than +2 z-scores
- Bone age 8y
Laboratory Investigations
LH pending (expected to be high)
FSH pending (expected to be high)
E3 pending (expected to be high due to stimulation from above via GnRH)
Other Investigations
CT brain was ordered swiftly, and a hamartoma in the hypothalamic region of the brain was visualized.
Final Diagnosis
Precocious puberty – most likely due to the Tanner III breasts
Hypothalamic hamartoma (HH) – likely the focus of the epileptic episode (gelastic seizure) as well as the cause of the precocious puperty.
Take Home Message
Gelastic seizures is the term used to describe focal or partial seizures with bouts of uncontrolled laughing or giggling. They are often called laughing seizures. The person may look like they are smiling or smirking.
New to me was that HH’s are often associated with producing LH or GnRH itself:
The most common, and usually the only, endocrine disturbance in patients with HH and epilepsy is central precocious puberty (CPP). The mechanism for CPP associated with HH may relate to ectopic generation and pulsatile release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) from the HH, but this remains an unproven hypothesis. Possible regulators of GnRH release that are intrinsic to HH tissue include the following: (1) glial factors (such as transforming growth factor α – TGFα) and (2) γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)–mediated excitation. Both are known to be present in surgically-resected HH tissue, but are present in patients with and without a history of CPP, suggesting the possibility that symptoms related to HH are directly associated with the region of anatomic attachment of the HH to the hypothalamus, which determines functional network connections, rather than to differences in HH tissue expression or pathophysiology.
