10.7 Seizures And Epilepsy Flashcards

1
Q

Define epilepsy

A

condition of recurrent seizures
- Seizures arise from groups of neurons firing in an abnormal way in the cerebral cortex of the cerebral hemispheres.
- One seizure does not signify epilepsy (up to 10% of people worldwide have a single seizure during their lifetime
- Many individuals with a single seizure have a clear predisposing cause: infection, electrolyte abnormalities, sleep deprivation: these are labelled “acute symptomatic seizures” and do not typically equate to the chronic condition of having epilepsy.

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2
Q

Classification of epilepsy

A

EEG based

Genetic
- generalised EEG pattern
- “all over the place”

Acquired
- Focal EEG pattern
- focal onset (aware & awake / not aware & awake)

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3
Q

Acquired epilepsy
Seizure Manifestations

A
  1. Focal onset in motor cortex
    - aware with focal motor seizure
    focal twitching of hand
  2. Focal onset in visual cortex
    - Aware with focal occipital seizure
    Flashing lights (non formed hallucinations)
  3. Focal onset in hippocampus/temporal cortex
    - Aware with focal hippocampal seizure
    Psychic experience
    - Aware with focal seizure of limbic system
    - Aura of psychic experience (déjà vu, jamais vu etc etc)
    - An aura is a seizure that occurs when the patient is awake (so the memory can be laid down).
    - Sometimes, after the aura, the seizure can spread to other parts of the brain
    - hippocampus is critical structure for memory (memory loss)
  4. Focal onset in temporal lobe, cingulate gyrus
    - Altered alertness
    - Staring (in a blank way)
    - Head Turning
    - Lip smacking (automatic behaviour is termed automatisms)
  5. Focal onset spread
    - Focal to bilateral tonic-clonic
    - Aware -> not aware -> bilateral tonic-clonic
    - Tonic: limbs held stiff & straight
    - Clonic: rhythmic jerks of body
    - Focal to bilateral frontal lobe: characterized by excessive motor activity
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4
Q

Genetic epilepsy
Seizure manifestations

A
  • Genetic; also called “Primary Generalized”, or Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy (IGE)
  • age dependant

Myoclonus
- Rapid, shock-like movement

Absence
- A specific term for a staring spell during childhood.

Tonic-clonic

Atonic - NOT IN ADULTS!
- An infantile seizure disorder. (in adults, typically a functional disorder)

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5
Q

Epileptic syndromes
4 Types

A

Types in order
1. Childhood absence epilepsy
2. Juvenile absence
3. Juvenile myoclonic
4. Epilepsy with generalised tonic-clonic seizures alone

  • mostly pt are <20years
  • should ask about myoclonus or absence
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6
Q

Differential Diagnosis

A
  1. Deja vu on its own
  2. Panic attacks
  3. Migraine
  4. Syncope
  5. Narcolepsy

6. Non-Epileptic Seizures
Revision: seizure presentations in teenagers and adults
- Tonic-Clonic seizures
- Frontal lobe seizures (lot of motor activity)
- Focal onset with impaired awareness
Clinical features:
- Unusual in epilepsy to have daily seizures (Most seizures respond to treatment, even if imperfectly)
- Combination of frequent seizures, poor drug response and normal EEG: unusual for diagnosis of epilepsy.
- Diagnosis usually requires neurological evaluation, and, in some cases, video-EEG monitoring

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