Isabel Healthcare Blog

Childhood Absence Epilepsy/ Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder?

Written by Mandy Tomlinson | Thu, Sep 20, 2018 @ 03:30 PM

Childhood Absence Epilepsy (CAE) and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) have similar symptoms and are often incorrectly diagnosed in children. There are many reasons as to why children are misdiagnosed, including failing to obtain a good history, or poor information from the family. The child’s school teacher may have contacted the parents  as they have noticed the child’s lack of attention, ‘blanking out’ or daydreaming episodes in class, which are affecting the child’s learning.  CAE and ADHD need careful evaluation as they have different treatment options and the wrong diagnosis can make the child’s symptoms worse or cause them to develop new symptoms due to incorrect medication being prescribed.

What is CAE and ADHD?

Childhood Absence Epilepsy (CAE)

CAE is a syndrome that occurs in 1 in 1000 children and is one of the most common types of early childhood seizures. The child presents around the ages of 5-9 years with frequent bouts of inattention and staring episodes, which can be described as ‘blanking out’ or daydreaming. The bouts last between 3-30 seconds and the child has no post-ictal state, they have no recollection of the episode and typically resume normal activity straight away. Other clinical features include automatisms which may take the form of eyes fluttering, chewing movements of the mouth or rolling eyes upwards. A child typically has numerous episodes a day which interferes with their ability to learn and process information.  As the episodes are not dramatic, they tend to pass unnoticed by parents and caregivers for a long time before a diagnosis is sought.

Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)

ADHD shares the core symptoms of inattention, staring episodes or daydreaming. Other symptoms include easy distractibility, disorganization, forgetfulness and a tendency to lose things. Impulsive (hyperactivity) symptoms include fidgeting, excessive talking, noisy behaviour and interrupting others.  Hyperactivity symptoms may remit as the child matures but the inattentive and staring symptoms often persist.  Symptoms tend to be present for at least six months before a diagnosis is made. 

Both CAE and ADHD could coexist in the same patient.  If this is the case or the patient is misdiagnosed with CAE instead of ADHD and commenced on antiepileptic medications for CAE, then these medications may contribute to attention difficulties, irritability and hyperactivity because of the medications commenced inappropriately.

The Diagnostic Conundrum

With the core symptoms of inattentiveness, staring episodes or daydreaming being common in both conditions, how do you narrow your differential diagnosis and make the correct diagnosis?  The key to making the correct diagnosis is rooted in the behavioural description of the patient. For this reason, accurate history taking, obtaining information from caregivers, and research are all of vital importance. If you do not have enough information from the parent who has brought the child to be seen but the teacher has reported the inattention, then ask for the main caregivers to keep a chart which documents the behaviour seen by:

  • Date/Time
  • How long event happened for
  • Description of symptoms (daydreaming, inattention, could they be roused during the episode)
  • What happened after the episode, how did it resolve and what was the child’s behaviour like.

This will give you a clear indication of patterns in the behaviour and exactly how many episodes are occurring a day. An ADHD diagnosis is dependent on family and school assessments, behavioural history and clinical observation. A CAE diagnosis is made on similar reporting and an EEG may assist the diagnosis, but this EEG could also be unremarkable, so a detailed history and examination are the most important tool in differentiating between the conditions. CAE can sometimes be diagnosed in an outpatient clinic by inducing an absence seizure by the means of hyperventilation.

Another key feature which would help your diagnosis is to ask whether the child can be roused out of the staring and daydreaming episodes when they occur. In CAE if you try and communicate with the child or tickle them there will be no response until the episode ends naturally, whereas in ADHD the child will generally respond and refocus on you.

Differential Diagnosis

Using a differential diagnosis tool will help you organise the symptoms you have gathered from your history and see which symptoms are more likely to be represented by the conditions you are researching. ADHD appears a closer match than CAE for these symptoms using the Isabel DDx Generator with Likelihood Indicator, as hyperactivity isn’t a feature of CAE, but it is of ADHD.

If you commence a patient on a medication for their ADHD or CAE and you get an inadequate response to that medication, then you should re-examine your diagnosis, especially if the patient develops new symptoms not seen previously.  Ask the caregivers to maintain a behavior chart after medication has been started and if your diagnosis and medication is correct then you will see a reduction in episodes and an improvement in the symptoms described.

Differentiating between ADHD and CAE is extremely important, as the misdiagnosis delays appropriate treatment and resolution of symptoms. In children, an early correct diagnosis and timely management can improve social interaction, behaviour and prevent poor academic performance. Once the correct diagnosis has been made regular evaluations and follow are essential to ensure the child’s condition improves and their medication is correctly adjusted as they grow. Increased clinical awareness will help resolve the diagnostic conundrum which exists between ADHD and CAE.

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