Epilepsy Flashcards

1
Q

Seizure vs Epilepsy

A

Abnormal hypersynchronous discharge of neurons
- Can be provoked or unprovoked

Occurrence of than one unprovoked seizure

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2
Q

Seizure semiology

A

Signs and symptoms of a seizure from onset throughout the course of the seizure
- Can help identify laterization and localization of onset

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3
Q

Eleptiform discharges

A

Spikes of activity in brain that appear during inerictal period
- Spikes, sharp waves, spikes and waves, polyspikes, polyspikes and wave

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4
Q

Seizure types:
- Focal onset seizures (Focal aware, Focal impaired awareness, focal to bilateral tonic-clonic)
- Generalized onset seizures (Absence, tonic, clonic, atonic, myoclonic)
- Unknown onset seizures

A
  • Originate in specific region in one cerebral hemisphere; Assoc w/ underlying structural abnormality
  • Retains awareness but has auras
  • Impaired awareness, start in small part of hemisphere before spreading throughout
  • Starts focally but spreads to both hemispheres, leading to stiffening and bilateral jerking
  • Both hemispheres simultaneously
  • Temporary loss of conscientiousness, blank stare
  • Sudden bilateral extension/flex of head, trunk or limbs
  • Bilateral rhythmic jerking, upper and lower limbs
  • Sudden/brief loss of muscle tone, falling to floor
  • Brief, shock-like involuntary jerkingn
  • Inadequate info to classify but can be possible later
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5
Q

Behaviours and auras associate with which lobe in focal onset seizures?
- Motor agitation, Jacksonian march, speech disruption
- Fear, deja-vu/jamais-vu, derealization, auditory/visual hallucinations
- Vertigo, visual hallucinations, somatosensory stmptoms
- Visual hallucinations (colour, shape, light), loss of vision
- Rising epigastric sensations, gustatory sensations

A

Frontal lobe

Temporal lobe

Parietal lobe

Occipital lobe

Insular cortex

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6
Q

Epilepsy syndromes:
- Onset in neonates and infants
- Onset in childhood
- Onset at a variable age

A
  • Can disappear in childhood (Self-limited epilepsies)
  • Developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEE; developmental impairment)
  • Etiology-specific syndromes (have specific causes)
  • Self-limited
  • DEE
  • Genetic-generalized epilepsy syndromes (have genetic origin)
  • Focal epilepsy syndromes
  • Generalized epilepsy syndromes
  • Combined generalized and focal
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7
Q

Epilepsies w/ onset in childhood
- Self-limited (Childhood epilepsy w/ Centrotemporal spikes)
- Genetic generalized (Childhood absence epilepsy)

A
  • 15-25%, 3-13 years old
  • Occur during sleep (tonic-clonic) or waking (focal aware)
  • Responsive to drug treatment and remits
  • 10-15%~ 4-8 years old
  • Frequent absence seizures w/ blank stare
  • Impaired attention, language, executive functions, visuospatial skills
  • Remits but constantly misdiagnosed as ADHD
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8
Q

Focal epilepsy syndromes:
- Temporal lobe epilepsy
- Right TLE vs Left TLE + Language deficits
- Frontal lobe epilepsy

A
  • Divided into mesial temporal love epilepsy or neocortical/lateral temporal lobe epilespsy
  • Hippocampal sclerosis, wide-eyed stare and automatisms, cognitive impairments
  • Don’t respond to drug treatments, need surgery
  • Episodic (declarative) memory, ling term memory consolidation, new info retrieval impaired
  • Right TLE: Deficits in verbal mem, Left TLE: Deficits in visuospatial mem
  • Naming ability and verbal fluency affected; also impaired auditory comprehension

————

  • Onset at dorsolateral prefrontal cortex
  • Short, motor activity (Jacksonian march, motor agitation), retain awareness
  • Deficits in language and exec function
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9
Q

Lennox-Gastaut syndrome
Ramussen’s syndrome
Landau-Kleffner syndrome
Reflex epilepsy

A
  • Childhood onset from 2-6 years old
  • Daily multiple seizures + atonic drop attacks
  • Slowed development or behav disorders as result
  • Inflammatory disease affecting single cerebral hemisphere
  • Affects children 6-15 years old w/ inflammation lasting 4-8 months
  • Frequent/Severe focal seizures, loss of motor, speech, cog function
  • Inflammation causes permanent damage to affected hemisphere
  • Rare disorder between 3-7 years old
  • Seizures and progressive loss of language after normal devel
  • Seizures triggered by specific sensory stim, activity or cog event (lights, sounds, hot water, card games, etc)
  • May be generalized or focal
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10
Q

Epilepsy treatments:
- Anti-epileptic drugs
- Ketogenic diet
- Vagus nerve stimulation (Neuromodulation)
- Deep brain stimulation (Neuromodulation)
- Surgery (Anterior temporal lobectomy, hemispherectomy, corpus callosotomy)

A
  • First line treatment
  • Suppress rapid/excessive neuron firing by blocking Na channels or increasing GABA
  • High fat, low protein, low carbs diet that increases ketone bodies and decreases glucose
  • Ketones block site of regulation on vesicular glutamate transporters to prevent release into synapse
  • Stimulates left vagus nerve (CN10) with implanted electrode and signal generator under clavicle
  • Activates vagal afferents to brainstem to increase release of norepinephrine and serotonin
  • Chronically implanted electrodes create high freq electrical stim to suppress firing of neurons for a second or more
  • Open loop - Stim delivered intermittently
  • Closed loop - Stim delivered when device detects seizure beginning
  • Removes seizure focus area not assoc w/ primary sensory/motor areas
  • Removes 3-8 cm of anterior tip of temporal lobe
  • Removes most or all of one hemisphere
  • Sever surface of corpus callosum to stop drop attacks
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11
Q

Variables that predict being seizure free after surgery

A
  • Brain pathology: Structural abnormalities increases chance
  • Age at surgery: Younger patients (<30) increases chance
  • Duration of seizures: Shorter increases chance
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12
Q

Factors implicated in cognitive dysfunction in epilepsy:
- Underlying etiology
- Epileptic seizures
- Anti-epileptic medications (AED)

A
  • Genetic mutations in TSC1 and TSC2 genes cause brain developmental malformations and epilepsy
  • Damages the brain, leading to impairment
  • More harmful w/ longer seizure duration
  • Reduces neuronal excitability which can cause negative side effects on cognition
  • Memory and executive function impacted w/ more AED
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13
Q

Memory
- Sensory
- Working memory
- Long-term memory
- Declarative vs Nondeclarative
- Brain regions

A

Process by which mind encodes, stores and retrieves info
- Sensory info is registered consciously, very short
- Temporary storage and manipulation of limited amount of info, 3-4 capacity
- Storage over long period, unlimited capacity
- Declarative (Events/Episodic and facts/semantic), nondeclarative (learned skills)
- Medial temporal lobe structures (hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus) for declarative memory

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14
Q

Language
- Expressive vs Receptive
- Brain regions affected

A

Ability to express onself and comprehend linguistic info, involving naming and verbal fluency
- Expressive: Dependent on frontal lobe (Broca’s area, premotor area)
- Receptive: Dependent on temporal lobe (Wernicke’s area, primary auditory cortex)
- Angular gyrus - Processes written language

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15
Q

Cognitive phenotypes (Baxendale & Thompson, 2020)
- Goal
- Laterality
- Onset of seizures
- Dynamic
- Mood
- Good predictor for verbal learning/language function and visual memory?

A
  • Goal: Investigate usefulness in phenotypes (globally low/high, low executive functioning/processing speed, low language/memory function) to predict seizure and neuropsychological outcomes following epilepsy surgery w/ temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE)
  • No effect of laterality of TLE on cog phenotype… but ppl w/ left TLE more likely to have lower language/memory impairment than right TLE
  • Widespread cog impairment had earlier onset of seizures than those who had any of the cog phenotypes
  • Cognitive phenotypes are dynamic rather than just showing neurodevelopmental factors or progression
  • Phenotypes related to mood; Mem/language impairment assoc w/ anxiety, widespread impairment assoc w/ depression
  • Cog phenotypes not found to predict surgical outcome or postoperative cognitive decline in verbal learning/language function… But age, side of surgery, and preoperative function were
  • But successful predictor w/ visual memory (greater cog phenotype pre causes greater cog decline post)
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16
Q

Accelerated long-term forgetting (ALF) (Grayson-Collins et al., 2019)
- What is ALF
- Goal
- What happened after seizures subsided
- What was assoc w/ worse recall w/ long delay

A
  • Memory disorder characterized by adequate recall after short, but not long delays
  • Goal: See if ALF subsides as epilepsy severity and seizures diminish in children w/ genetic generalized epilepsy (GCE)
  • After 2-year follow up, seizures subsided but ALF still there and same; ALF wasn’t actually seizure-related
  • Instead worse recall w/ long delay was related to greater epilepsy severity + earlier seizure onset by only