Epilepsy Flashcards
epilepsy
a tendency to spontaneous, recurrent seizures, usually defined by experience of at least 2 UNPROVOKED seizures
age w/ highest incidence of seizures
first year of life –> highest incidence of epilepsy
then incidence rate decreases until about mid 20s and plateaus
then at age 60 slowly increases
seizure: an abnormal, “clinically observable” event associated w/ and caused by an abnormal “____________” discharge in the EEG
an abnormal, “clinically observable” event associated w/ and caused by an abnormal “HYPER SYNCHRONOUS” discharge in the EEG
seizure first aid
roll person on side (to prevent aspiration)
most seizures setup on their own <2 min
damaging features of seizures
- external injury
- motor activity: hypoxemia, acidemia, hypercarbia/hypoventilation
- local neuronal metabolic exhaustion
- EAA damage (excitatory amino acid damage)
- psychological factors
- poss. reinforcing seizure circuit if let keep firing
seizure types (broad)
- partial (focal) –> localized
- simple, complex, or partial w/ secondary generalization - generalized –> all over brain
- absence, myoclonic, tonic-clonic
focal seizure vs. generalized seizure
refers to ONSET
focal –> starts in just a focal area of cortex, possibly causing a manifestation related to the function of that area of cortex, and then may or may not spread
generalized –> starts all over the surface of the brain at the same time
Jacksonian march
seizure begins with CLONIC activity in one limb or the face and sequentially SPREADS to the remainder of the involved hemibody, ultimately involving both sides of body w/ a bilaterally synchronous convulsion
EEG discharge: from subset of the motor strip to the whole of one hemisphere, to generalized involvement of BOTH hemispheres
features of pt presenting w/ seizures
- focal/asymmetrical features
- stereotyped, brief episodes
- randomness (not every time you’re in pool, etc.)
- activity that starts on ONE SIDE before other
- preferential eye turning
- one side stiff, other limp
- POSITIVE signs vs. negative signs
background features of pt possibly presenting w/ seizures
-early handedness = hemiparesis
(started using one hand exclusively, early on, bc other hand was abnormal)
- limb asymmetry (one hand abnormally small bc that side of brain is defective)
- developmental delay/cognitive disability
partial seizures signs
- motor (Jacksonian march)
- autonomic (vomiting, borborygmi)
- somatosensory
- psychic signs
- autonmatisms
how are automatisms unique from other partial seizure signs?
they are RELEASE phenomena, NOT driven directly by the seizure discharge.
represent the release of automatic, pre-programmed behaviors that are normally suppressed by the cerebral cortex.
processes leading to focal seizures
- old birth injury/stroke
- old traumatic injury
- AVM
- focal dysgenesis/brain malformation
- sequela of CNS infection
- tumor
- genetics
causes of generalized epilepsy
- GENETIC
- metabolic derangement
simple partial seizure
consciousness maintained