19.2. Paediatric Neurology - Epilepsy Flashcards
What is the Definition of a Seizure / Fit?
Any Sudden Attack from Whatever Cause
What is the Definition of Syncope?
Faint - A Neuro-Cardiogenic Mechanism
What is the Definition of a Convulsion?
Seizure where there is Prominent Motor Activity
What is the Definition of an Epileptic Seizure?
An Abnormal Excessive Hyper-Synchronous Discharge from a Group of Cortical Neurons
Note - Not all Seizures are Necessarily Epileptic
What, other than Epilepsy, can cause Seizures?
- Acute Symptomatic Seizures - due to Acute Insults:
- a) Hypoxia-Ischaemia
- b) Hypoglycaemic
- c) Infection
- d) Trauma
- Reflex Anoxic Seizure - Common in Toddlers
- Syncope
- Parasomnias - e.g. Night Terrors
- Behavioural Sterrotypes
- Psychogenic Seizures
What is a Febrile Convulsion?
Commonest Cause of “Acute Symptomatic Seizure”:
Convulsion Associated with Fever but without Evidence of Intracranial Infection / Defined Cause for the Seizure
Note - Seen between 3 months and 5 years
What are the Different Seizure Types?
- Tonic Clonic
- Tonic
- Clonic
- Myoclonic
- Absence
What is the Mechanism by which an Epileptic Fit is Triggered?
- Decreased Inhibition - Gamma-Amino-Butyric Acid (GABA)
- Excessive Excitiation - Glutamate / Aspartate
- Excessive Influx of Na and Ca Ions
What is the Difference between:
- Generalised Epileptic Seizures?
- Focal (Partial) Epileptic Seizures?
- a) Involves Both Sides of the Cerebral Hemispheres
- b) Loss of Control / Awareness - Memory Gap
- c) No Warning
- a) Involves 1 Cortical Lobe / Part of it
- b) No Loss of Control (Simple Partial)
- b) Loss of Control (Complex Partial)
What is involved in the Stepwise Approach to a Diagnosis of Epilepsy?
- Is the Paroxysmal Event Epileptic in Nature?
- Is it Epilepsy?
- What Type of Seizure is Occurring?
- What is the Epilepsy Syndrome?
- What is the Aetiology?
- What are the Social / Educational Effects on the Child?
How is Epilepsy Diagnosed?
- History
- Video / Recording of the Event
- ECG in Convulsive Seizures
- Interictal / Ictal EEG
- MRI Brain - to determine Aetiology
How is Epilepsy Managed in Children?
- Sodium Valproate - Generalised
- Carbamazepine - Focal
Note - Only Considered if Diagnosis is Clear
Note - This controls Seizures, does not Cure Epilepsy