Blackouts, Fits, Faints, Funny Turns Flashcards
What are 5 differentials for blackouts?
1) Vasovagal syncope.
2) Cardiac syncope.
3) Non-epileptic attacks.
4) Intermittent hydrocephalus (rare).
5) Migraine (if no loss of awareness).
What questions should you ask when taking a history from someone complaining of blackouts?
Trigger?
Prodrome - what happened immediately before the event?
Attack - what happened during the event?
Recovery - what happened immediately after?
PMH - have they had similar attacks previously?
What investigations should you do in a patient who presents with blackouts?
12-lead ECG is very important - look for prolonged corrected QT interval.
Brain imaging.
EEG.
Video telemetry.
Heart scan.
Tilt table test.
What is one of the most valuable things you can do when taking a history from someone presenting with blackouts?
Ask about and obtain an eye witness account.
Why should you be cautious interpreting the results of an EEG?
EEG’s have high false positive rates leading to over-diagnosis.
What is epilepsy?
Recurrent seizures
What is focal epilepsy?
Abnormal electrical activity in localised area of the brain
Describe a focal aware seizure.
Focal aware seizures aka. aura, simple partial seizure.
Symptoms depend on the site of the focus e.g. limb jerking (frontal lobe), paraesthesia (parietal lobe), speech arrest.
Focal seizures: what lobe of the brain would be affected if a patient had limb jerking?
Frontal Lobe
Focal seizures: what lobe of the brain would be affected if a patient had paraesthesia?
Parietal Lobe
Name 2 types of seizure that can result from the spread of a focal seizure.
1) Focal impaired awareness seizure (complex partial seizure).
2) Focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizure (secondary generalised tonic clonic).
Name 3 types of generalised seizure.
1) Absence
2) Myoclonic
3) Primary Generalised Tonic Clonic
Give 3 signs/symptoms of a stereotypical seizure.
Patient will struggle to describe the event.
Duration 1-3 minutes.
Tonic-clonic phase.
Vocalisations.
Eyes/mouth open.
Post-event amnesia.
Describe the triggers, prodrome, attack, duration and recovery of an epileptic seizure.
Triggers: sleep deprivation, early morning, alcohol withdrawal, photosensitivity, medication non-compliace
Prodrome: aura, deja vu, olfactory/gustatory aura.
Attack: tonic clonic.
Duration: 30-120 seconds.
Recovery: confusion, headache, amnesia, prolonged recovery.
What is syncope?
A transient loss of consciousness, loss of postural tone e.g. fainting.