An 18-year-old male with a de-novo ASXL3 mutation confirmed in 2014 presented with profound developmental delay, hypotonia, wheelchair dependence, and feeding difficulties requiring GJ tube placement. He exhibited episodes of combativeness and staring off. At age 18, he experienced his first generalized tonic–clonic seizure. CT head was unremarkable. EEG obtained months later due to poor tolerance, demonstrated intermittent generalized slowing. Despite the known risk of behavioral worsening with levetiracetam, initiation of the drug led to improvement in agitation and staring, suggesting these symptoms reflected ictal or peri-ictal hyperexcitability in cortical or limbic network circuits rather than primary psychiatric dysfunction.
Concurrent metabolic evaluation revealed abnormalities in amino acid utilization, including dysregulated serine, methionine, and tyrosine metabolism, with elevated alpha-amino-N-butyric acid, findings might indicate emerging mitochondrial dysfunction. ASXL3 deficiency is thought to impair histone-mediated transcriptional regulation, disrupting amino acid pathways and leading to oxidative stress and energy imbalance, which contributes to both behavioral instability and seizure susceptibility.