Blommaert_2016_J.Child.Neurol_31_1220

Reference

Title : Diagnosis and Management of Drooling in Children With Progressive Dystonia: A Case Series of Patients With MEGDEL Syndrome - Blommaert_2016_J.Child.Neurol_31_1220
Author(s) : Blommaert D , van Hulst K , Hoogen FJ , Erasmus CE , Wortmann SB
Ref : Journal of Child Neurology , 31 :1220 , 2016
Abstract :

Drooling is a common problem in children with progressive dystonia. The authors noted a 58% incidence of drooling in 22/38 children with MEGDEL, a rare neurodegenerative cause of dystonia and report on the clinical course of four patients. Drooling of varying severity and subsequent respiratory problems were treated at the authors' multidisciplinary saliva-control outpatient clinic. One patient improved on antireflux medication, the second after medication with drooling as side effect was changed. Two other patients underwent salivary gland surgery, one of whom significantly improved; the other died shortly after surgery. The heterogeneity of the cases presented shows the need for stepwise and personalized treatment. The authors recommend the following: (1) optimize the treatment of the underlying neurological condition and replace medication that stimulates saliva secretion; (2) treat constipation, scoliosis, and gastroesophageal reflux if there is still a risk of chronic aspiration of saliva; (3) perform more intense/invasive treatment (botulinum toxin, salivary gland surgery).

PubMedSearch : Blommaert_2016_J.Child.Neurol_31_1220
PubMedID: 27229007

Related information

Disease MEGDEL syndrome

Citations formats

Blommaert D, van Hulst K, Hoogen FJ, Erasmus CE, Wortmann SB (2016)
Diagnosis and Management of Drooling in Children With Progressive Dystonia: A Case Series of Patients With MEGDEL Syndrome
Journal of Child Neurology 31 :1220

Blommaert D, van Hulst K, Hoogen FJ, Erasmus CE, Wortmann SB (2016)
Journal of Child Neurology 31 :1220