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Dive into the research topics where Sara Kivity is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara Kivity.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2010

Neuropsychological aspects of benign childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes

Hadassa Goldberg-Stern; O.M. Gonen; M. Sadeh; Sara Kivity; Avinoam Shuper; Dov Inbar

PURPOSE To establish whether the disability in benign epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes (BECTS) is the result of the number of seizures, the anti-epileptic therapy or is an inherent characteristic of the syndrome itself. METHODS Thirty-six children with BECTS were tested for cognitive functions prior to commencing treatment with anti-epileptic drugs, and the findings were compared with those in 15 children with normal electroencephalograms, performed for unrelated reasons. The data in the study group were further correlated with the laterality of the epileptic focus and the number of seizures. RESULTS Scores for verbal functioning on neuropsychological tests were significantly lower in the study group than the control group. There was no relationship between the neuropsychological scores in the patients and either lateralization of the epileptic focus or number of seizures. DISCUSSION Children with BECTS have an impaired ability to process verbal information. The deficiency is apparently a result of the pathological electrical discharges that are part of the syndrome and are not dependent on the epileptic focus laterality, the number of seizures, or the anti-epileptic treatment.


Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology | 1991

The benign partial nonrolandic epilepsies.

Pinchas Lerman; Sara Kivity

Although rolandic epilepsy is the only epileptic syndrome that, at present, fully meets all the criteria of benignity and is widely recognized as such, there are also other forms of partial epilepsy that are benign. These are also genetically determined and age-dependent, occurring in neurologically intact children older than 18 months of age. As a rule, the seizures are brief and infrequent, usually responding well to antiepileptic drugs and remitting spontaneously before adulthood. The EEG background is normal, the morphology of the spikes is typical, and they are activated by sleep; generalized spike-wave discharges may occur. During the past decade, there have been reports of a number of additional syndromes of benign partial epilepsy. These include benign occipital epilepsy (the most common in this group), benign frontal epilepsy, benign epilepsy with affective symptomatology (or benign psychomotor epilepsy), benign epilepsy with extreme somatosensory evoked potentials, benign partial epilepsy of adolescence, and benign epilepsy associated with multiple spike foci. The Landau-Kleffner syndrome is often included among the benign epilepsies. These nonrolandic benign epilepsies are described in detail, and the relevant literature is reviewed.


Pediatric Neurology | 2014

Thiamine Deficiency in Infancy: Long-Term Follow-Up

Aviva Mimouni-Bloch; Hadassa Goldberg-Stern; Rachel Strausberg; Amichai Brezner; Eli Heyman; Dov Inbar; Sara Kivity; Alex Zvulunov; Ignacio Sztarkier; Rami Fogelman; Aviva Fattal-Valevski

BACKGROUND In 2003, several hundred Israeli infants risked thiamine deficiency after being fed a soy-based formula deficient in thiamine. Approximately 20 patients were seriously affected, and three of them died. We report the clinical presentation of acute encephalopathy in 11 children and the long-term sequelae of eight children who initially survived. PATIENTS In the acute phase, six had bulbar signs, five had ophthalmologic signs and two had phrenic neuropathy. Three of the five patients with cardiac involvement had cardiomyopathy and died in the acute phase. One patient presented with a complete atrioventricular block. RESULTS In the long-term, one patient, who was in a chronic vegetative state, died after 6 years. Seven children exhibited mental retardation and motor abnormalities, six developed severe epilepsy, two early kyphoscoliosis, and one patient remained with a complete atrioventricular block. CONCLUSIONS Infants who survive severe infantile thiamine deficiency have serious residual motor and cognitive sequelae as well as epilepsy.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2014

Paternal germline mosaicism of a SCN2A mutation results in Ohtahara syndrome in half siblings

Ayelet Zerem; Dorit Lev; Lubov Blumkin; Hadassa Goldberg-Stern; Yael Michaeli-Yossef; Ayelet Halevy; Sara Kivity; Kazuyuki Nakamura; Naomichi Matsumoto; Esther Leshinsky-Silver; Hirotomo Saitsu; Tally Lerman-Sagie

Ohtahara syndrome is a devastating early infantile epileptic encephalopathy caused by mutations in different genes. We describe a patient with Ohtahara syndrome who presented on the first day of life with refractory tonic seizures and a suppression-burst pattern on EEG. The patient developed severe microcephaly, and never achieved any developmental milestones. He died at the age of 5 years. A de novo missense mutation (c. 4007C>A, p.S1336Y) in SCN2A was found. Interestingly, the father has another son with Ohtahara syndrome from a different mother. The half brother carries the same SCN2A mutation, strongly suggesting paternal gonadal mosaicism of the mutation. The broad clinical spectrum of SCN2A mutations now includes Ohtahara syndrome. This is the first report of familial Ohtahara syndrome due to a germline mosaic SCN2A mutation. Somatic mosaicism, including germline, has been described in several epileptic encephalopathies such as Dravet syndrome, KCNQ2 neonatal epileptic encephalopathy, SCN8A epileptic encephalopathy and STXBP1 related Ohtahara syndrome. Mosaicism should be considered as one of the important inheritance patterns when counseling parents with a child with these devastating diseases.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2014

Idiopathic Photosensitive Occipital Epilepsy: Clinical and Electroencephalographic (EEG) Features

Keren Politi-Elishkevich; Sara Kivity; Avinoam Shuper; Hagit Levine; Hadassa Goldberg-Stern

Idiopathic photosensitive occipital lobe epilepsy is a reflex, age- and localization-related syndrome. We describe the clinical and electroencephalographic features, therapy, and outcome of 16 children/adolescents with this syndrome. The cohort included 2 sets of siblings and 7 patients with other first- or second-degree relatives with a seizure history. All patients had occipital onset seizures and 15 had secondarily generalized tonic-clonic seizures. Seizure frequency was relatively low in all patients but one. Myoclonic seizures later developed in 2 patients with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. Eight patients achieved full seizure control with monotherapy, and 5 required a second drug; 3 patients had rare seizures and were not treated with antiepileptics. Seven patients required special education or developmental assistance. This interesting syndrome sheds light on the pathophysiology and genetic etiology of common phenomena such as photosensitivity and headache. Further large prospective studies are required to better define this unique syndrome and its implications.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2011

Selective Mutism and Abnormal Electroencephalography (EEG) Tracings

Keren Politi; Sara Kivity; Hadassa Goldberg-Stern; Ayelet Halevi; Avinoam Shuper

Epileptic discharges are not considered a part of the clinical picture of selective mutism, and electroencephalography is generally not recommended in its work-up. This report describes 6 children with selective mutism who were found to have a history of epilepsy and abnormal interictal or subclinical electroencephalography recordings. Two of them had benign epilepsy of childhood with centro-temporal spikes. The mutism was not related in time to the presence of active seizures. While seizures could be controlled in all children by medications, the mutism resolved only in 1. Although the discharges could be coincidental, they might represent a co-morbidity of selective mutism or even play a role in its pathogenesis. Selective mutism should be listed among the psychiatric disorders that may be associated with electroencephalographic abnormalities. It can probably be regarded as a symptom of a more complicated organic brain disorder.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2012

Long-term follow-up for ophthalmologic sequelae in children treated with corticosteroids for infantile spasms.

Tal Eidlitz-Markus; Moshe Snir; Sara Kivity; Hadassa Goldberg-Stern; Yishai Haimi-Cohen; Avraham Zeharia

The aim of the study was to determine if early steroid treatment of infantile spasms is associated with ocular complications years after its termination. Twenty-five patients with infantile spasms who underwent prolonged treatment with intramuscular synthetic adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and oral prednisone were evaluated for ocular complications 2 to 33 years after treatment cessation. Patients were followed by an ophthalmic examination that included anterior and posterior segments and measurement of intraocular pressure. Intraocular pressure was normal bilaterally in all patients. Findings on anterior segment examination were unremarkable. On posterior segment examination, 3 patients had an increased cup/disc ratio with normal intraocular pressure. In 2 patients, the increased ratio was considered an anatomical variant. Posterior segment findings in 2 patients were attributed to their background disease. In conclusion, early treatment with high-dose synthetic adrenocorticotropic hormone and oral prednisone for infantile spasm is apparently not associated with a risk of occular complications on long-term follow-up.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2015

Defective Auditory Processing in a Child With Temporal Epileptic Focus

Avinoam Shuper; Mordechai Medvedovsky; Sara Kivity

A 9-year-old boy presented with intolerance to noise that was a trigger for violent temper tantrums that occasionally resembled complex partial seizures. The condition was also a cause for withdrawal from all activities and settings that could potentially be associated with noise. Both electroencephalography and magnetoencephalography clearly demonstrated a left temporal (T5) epileptic focus, although the child never had convulsive seizures. Genetic studies failed to reveal a GRIN2A mutation. We suggest that the hyperacusis in the reported child is another variation of the Landau-Kleffner spectrum.


Seizure-european Journal of Epilepsy | 2011

The mystery of electroencephalography in acute lymphoblastic leukemia.

Hadassa Goldberg-Stern; Rony Cohen; Lea Pollak; Sara Kivity; Tal Eidlitz-Markus; Batya Stark; Isaac Yaniv; Avinoam Shuper

The aim of the study was to evaluate changes in electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings during the course of acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) in children. The study group consisted of 48 children with ALL who underwent a total of 72 EEGs at various stages of the disease. The medical files were reviewed for pertinent clinical data, and the EEGs were evaluated for changes in brain activity. Abnormal background activity was noted in 52.2% of the EEGs done at 1-10 days of therapy, in 43.5% of those done at 10-60 days, and only 4.3% of those done at later stages (p=0.037). These findings, together with earlier reports, suggest that early-stage ALL, even before treatment, may be associated with excessive slow EEG activity, which improves over time. The EEG changes, by themselves, are not an indication of central nervous system leukemia or a predictor of later seizures or other central nervous system involvement.


JAMA Neurology | 1975

Benign focal epilepsy of childhood. A follow-up study of 100 recovered patients.

Pinchas Lerman; Sara Kivity

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Dorit Lev

Wolfson Medical Center

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