This case describes a father-daughter pair who both experienced nocturnal seizures with similar semiologies and were later diagnosed with ADSHE after genetic test results revealed they each had a DEPDC5 deletion in exon 28.
The daughter had two-to-three-minute seizures that were characterized by gurgling noises, arousal from sleep, blank stare with eyes open, unresponsiveness to verbal stimuli, intermittent oral automatisms, and tongue biting. The seizures were not associated with any extremity jerking or motor movements.
The father’s seizures lasted one-to-two-minutes and were characterized on video electroencephalography (EEG) as arousal from sleep, sitting up in bed, and making grunting/guttural noises with and without loss of awareness.
Currently, seizures are well-controlled in the daughter and father with lacosamide and lacosamide plus brivaracetam, respectively. Due to the difficulty in diagnosing ADSHE, both father and daughter experienced delayed diagnosis of this genetic epilepsy subtype, which resulted in delayed appropriate treatment.