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Is there any treatment?
Treatment with corticosteroids such as ACTH (adrenocorticotrophic hormone) and prednisone is standard, despite the risk of
serious side effects. Newer antiepileptic medications, such as vigabatrin (currently not approved for use in the US) have
shown some efficacy. A small minority of children has secondarily generalized spasms as the result of cortical lesions (areas
of damaged brain tissue). Removal of these lesions may result in improvement.
What is the prognosis?
The prognosis for children with IS is dependent on the underlying causes of the seizures. The intellectual prognosis for children
with IS is generally poor because many babies with IS have neurological impairment prior to the onset of spasms. Spasms usually
resolve with or without treatment by mid-childhood, but more than half of the children with IS will develop other types of
seizures. There appears to be a close relationship between IS and Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome, an epileptic disorder of later
childhood.
What research is being done?
The NINDS supports broad and varied programs of research on epilepsy and other seizure disorders. This research is aimed at
discovering new ways to prevent, diagnose, and treat these disorders and, ultimately, to find cures for them. Hopefully, more
effective and safer treatments, such as neuroprotective agents, will be developed to treat IS and West Syndrome.
Synonyms: West Syndrome