Clinical presentation, Epidemiology and Treatment of Epilepsy Flashcards
What is the definition of epileptic seizures?
Epileptic seizures are synchronous and excessive discharge in the cerebral cortex that lead to a clinically discernible event
- many different seizure types depending in which area of the cerebral cortex the discharges originate
Why is it important to classify seizures?
- Categorisation
- Standardisation
- Communication
How to classify epilepsy?
- Seizure type
- Underlying aetiology or risk factor
- Syndrome
- age at onset
- topographic location of discharge
- EEG findings
- response to treatment
What are the classification of epilepsies?
- Seizure classification, ILAE 1981
- Epilepsy and Epilepsy Syndromes Classification, ILAE 1989
- no imaging
- no genetics - Current Proposal, Epilepsia 2010
What are different types of classification of seizures, ILAE 1981?
- Generalised:
- Generalised tonic-comic
- Absences
- Myoclonic
- Atonic
- Tonic - Partial
- simple partial
- complex partial
- secondarily generalised - Unclassifiable
What are types of classification of seizures?
- Generalised
2. Focal
What are generalised seizures?
Originate at some point within, and rapidly engage, bilaterally distributed networks
Bilateral networks can include cortical and subcortical structures, not necessarily the entire cortex
Individual seizure onset’s can appear localised, the location and lateralisation are not consistent
Generalised seizures can be asymmetric
What are focal epileptic seizures?
Originate within networks limited to one hemisphere, which may be discretely localised or more widely distributed
For each seizure type, ictal onset is consistent with preferential propagation patterns
In some cases there is more than 1 epileptogenic network, and more than 1 seizure type
What is absence seizure?
- Blank stare
- Loss of consciousness
- Cessation of motor activity
- Blinking, eye-rolling, minor tone change
- Sudden onset, rapid recovery
- Brief, many attacks per day
- Usually in idiopathic generalised epilepsy (IGE)
- Generalised spike and wave discharge
What is Generalised tonic-clonic?
- Loss of consciousness and awareness
- Vocalisation - ‘epileptic cry’
- Fall (injury)
- Tonic phase then clonic jerking
- Tongue biting, incontinence, cyanosis
- Sudden onset, gradual recovery
- Post-ictal confusion, sleep, headache, myalgia
- Aura/partial features of secondarily generalised
What is Myoclonic jerks?
- Brief jerk, single or cluster
- One muscle —> generalised jerks
- Intensity: slight tremor —> large amplitude jerks
- Consciousness probably preserved
- IGE (diurnal pattern) - JME
- Symptomatic epilepsies - deficit, seizures ++
- Generalised spike and poly spike wave
What is focal seizures without impairment of consciousness (IOC) ?
- No alteration in consciousness
- No amnesia
- Sudden onset and cessation
- Focal symptoms or signs reflect seizure focus
- Due to focal cortical pathology
What are types of focal seizures (focal seizure without LoC)?
- Temporal: epigastric-rising, deja-vu, fear, auditory, olfactory
- Frontal: less clear, motor, sensory, odd
- Parietal: sensory, vertigo
- Occipital:visual
What are focal seizures with impairment of consciousness?
- Temporal: 2-4 minutes
2. Frontal: 15-30 seconds
What are funny turns?
48 year old electrician
- Deja-by, odd smells from childhood
- Looked blank during a conversation with boss
- Fiddled with fingers, blew a kiss
What is temporal lobe seizure?
- Aura (SPS)
- Altered consciousness (CPS)
- Amnesia
- Automatism (oro-alimentary, gestural)
- Rapid onset, gradual recovery
What is temporal focal seizure with impairment of consciousness?
- 2-4 minutes
- Behavioural arrest/ motionless state
- Contralateral hand posturing & ipsilateral hand automatism
- Orofacial automatism
- May continue simple tasks
- Speech retained or dysphasia during and/or after seizure
- May be confused post-Ictally
What is frontal focal seizure with impairment of consciousness?
- Brief stereotyped seizures, 15-30 seconds
- Frequent attack with clustering
- Nocturnal
- Sudden onset and cessation
- Complex bilateral motor automatism
- Head rotation and automatism: face, limbs, speech
- Secondary generalisation - interictal and ictal EEG variable
What are examples of other extra-temporal focal seizures?
- Central
- Parietal
- Occipital