Can bruxism be a sign of the temporal lobe epilepsy? Case report of a child with bruxism and hippocampal cystic lesion

Sleep bruxism is a condition of high prevalence in childhood and has multifactorial causes. However, as a sign of temporal lobe epilepsy, it seems to be a rare event. There are reports of patients with bruxism related to temporal lobe seizures, showing that, exceptionally, an event such as teeth grinding may not be just a parasomnia. We present a child with bruxism, whose brain resonance shows cystic lesion compatible with choroid fissure cyst, which compresses the left hippocampus. Bruxism was documented by polysomnography, with extended electroencephalographic setup, without any electroencephalographic expression during episodes. Thus, we showed that the relation between bruxism and epilepsy in this patient with potentially epileptogenic lesion is remote.

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