Epilepsy & Seizures 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Evaluation of recent onset seizures and epilepsy

A

History
Physical and neurological examination
EEG
Neuroimaging
Other testing

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2
Q

Systematic approach to patients with new-onset seizure

A
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3
Q

First steps in setting the dignosis of epilepsy

A

1) decide whether a spell is truly epileptic or instead may be related to some other physiologic or psychogenic paroxysmal, transient phenomenon
2) decide whether an epileptic seizure was caused by an acute insult, provoked by other triggers, or related to a predisposition for recurrent, unprovoked seizures, defined as epilepsy.

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4
Q

Useful signs in clinical examination of new-onset seizure

A

The examination should assess potential injuries from a convulsive seizure such as:
tongue bites
lacerations
back pain from a compression fracture
shoulder pain from a subluxation

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5
Q

Blood tests in patients with new onset epilepsy

A

Published guidelines suggested obtaining blood glucose, blood cell counts, and electrolyte panels, particularly sodium, in specific clinical circumstances.
Toxicology screening should similarly be restricted to specific clinical circumstances

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6
Q

Which patients should have imaging test and which urgent imaging test

A

1) Patients with a first seizure should undergo neuroimaging
2) Urgent imaging should be performed in any patients with a new neurologic deficit, persistent altered mental status, recent trauma, or prolonged headache.

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7
Q

Which imaging test should be performed in patients with a first seizure episode

A

CT scan is often used as the first imaging modality because of its ease of access and should be considered for patients with new-onset seizures seen in the emergency department to assess for an acute brain insult, such as a stroke, bleed, or traumatic injury, often followed by a more accurate brain MRI performed with and without contrast
CT scans and standard MRI protocols often fail to detect the lesions associated with chronic epilepsy; for this reason, an MRI should be performed using an epilepsy-specific protocol.

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8
Q

Neuroimaging in chlidren with new onset epilepsy

A

In children with new-onset seizures, imaging may require conscious sedation or general anesthesia. An imaging study is not always required and may be omitted in children with a confident diagnosis of a benign or genetic epilepsy syndrome such as CAE or BECTS.
If there is any indication for a neuroimaging study, MRI is preferred.
Published guidelines recommend elective MRI in the presence of unexplained cognitive or motor impairment or neurological exam abnormality, partial-onset seizure, an EEG not characteristic of a benign partial epilepsy of childhood or IGE, or in children younger than 1 year of age. Emergency imaging is also recommended in any child exhibiting a prolonged postictal focal deficit

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9
Q

Neuroimaging in adults with new onset epilepsy

A

Neuroimaging is always indicated in adults with new-onset seizures or epilepsy to identify structural causes of epilepsy, some of which may require treatment of their own.
After the first unprovoked seizure, imaging in adults has a clinically significant yield of about 10%, leading to the diagnosis of disorders such as a brain tumor or other structural lesions.
CT remains the test most likely to be obtained in the emergency room after the initial seizure, but because of bone streak artifact will often miss temporal lobe pathology.
MRI is the imaging modality of choice for identifying brain pathology in patients with newonset seizures or epilepsy, and in that setting is preferably obtained with and without contrast.

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10
Q

What is the main contribution of routine EEG

A

Routine EEG is unlikely to record actual seizures, with the exception of generalized absence seizures that can be easily precipitated by hyperventilation in the untreated patient.
The main contribution of a routine EEG is the recording of interictal epileptiform activity, which includes
* spikes
* sharp waves
* spike-and-wave discharges
* polyspike-and-wave discharges

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11
Q

Criteria that help identify discharges as epileptiform

A

● They must be paroxysmal and distinct from the patient’s normal background activity.

● They must include an abrupt change in polarity occurring over several milliseconds (ms).

● The duration of each transient should be less than 200 ms. A spike has a duration of less than 70 ms; sharp waves have a duration between 70 and 200 ms.

● The discharge must have a physiologic field, with the discharge recorded from more than one electrode, and a voltage gradient should be present.

● They must not be one of the known benign variants or normal discharges such as wicket spikes, small sharp spikes (SSS), or vertex waves

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12
Q

EEG in absence seizures

A

The 3-Hz spike-and-slow-wave discharges are the hallmark of absence epilepsy. They often present in bursts lasting from 1 second to 3 seconds and can be activated by hyperventilation or hypoglycemia.
When the spike-and-slow wave discharges last longer than 6 seconds, they are often associated with an alteration of consciousness and are, thus, considered ictal discharges

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13
Q

EEG in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

A

interictal: generalized spike-and-slow-wave discharges often occur at a faster frequency, typically from 4 Hz to 6 Hz in this syndrome.
In addition, generalized polyspikes are also seen.
Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy is often associated with a photoparoxysmal response, whereby photic stimulation can elicit a bilaterally synchronous spike and slow wave during or outlasting the photic stimulation train.

ictal: irregular 3 to 4 Hz polyspike-waves with frontocentral predominance. Jerks are usually associated with the spike component of the discharge

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14
Q

What is generalized paroxysmal fast activity

A

Generalized paroxysmal fast activity consists of bursts of generalized, sharply contoured discharges in the beta frequency range. It is more frequently observed in non rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and typically lasts from 2 seconds to 4 seconds.
Generalized paroxysmal fast activity is traditionally associated with epileptic encephalopathy with intellectual disability, such as in patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, although it is also occasionally seen in individuals with generalized epilepsy and normal intelligence.

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15
Q

Occipital spikes: in which conditions are most commonly found and clinical features

A

1) Occipital spikes are frequently observed in childhood occipital epilepsy (Panayiotopoulos and Gastaut types) as well as in other types of occipital lobe epilepsy.
2) Childhood occipital epilepsy is often associated with autonomic symptoms, such as emesis, pallor, cardiorespiratory irregularities, ictal headache, and visual hallucinations

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16
Q

With which conditions are 1) frontotemporal 2) midtepmoral and posterior temporal discharges most commonly associated

A

1) mesial temporal lobe
2) neocortical temporal generators

17
Q

In which condition are centrotemporal spikes found

A

Centrotemporal spikes are observed in childhood epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes, which is the most common focal epilepsy syndrome of childhood

18
Q

Which disorder is associated with slow (1-2,5 Hz) spike-and-wave discharges

A

Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, a disorder associated with multiple seizure types and intellectual disability

19
Q

When is a lumbar puncture needed in a patient with new onset epilepsy

A

A lumbar puncture is only indicated if there is reason to suspect an infectious or inflammatory etiology (e.g., if the patient is febrile)

20
Q

Which patients benefit from treatment after first seizure episode

A

1) Patients with a first seizure, who have an epileptogenic structural abnormality on brain imaging and/or interictal epileptiform activity on EEG (have a greater than 60% risk of recurrence after a first unprovoked seizure)
2) after a first nocturnal convulsion

21
Q

Which patients shoud have an emergency EEG after a first seizure episode

A

Emergency EEG is indicated for patients who:

1) do not have a timely recovery after a seizure
2) have fluctuating mental status changes
3) show a neurologic deficit that is not explained by the imaging findings

22
Q

Probability to detect seizure activity on long term monitoring

A

25% within the first 30 minutes
50% in the first 2 hours
greater than 90% with 24- to 36-hour continuous recordings

23
Q

Should patients with provoked seizures have an EEG and brain imaging

A

Patients presenting with a provoked seizure should get at least an EEG and a brain imaging study because not infrequently they are found to have a remote structural abnormality or an EEG indicating a predisposition for generalized seizures

24
Q

Which test may be useful in patients with intractable focal epilepsy and a normal MRI

A

a fludeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) scan is useful in looking for a hypometabolic region.

25
Q

What is white coat compliance

A

improved patient adherence in the days around a physician office visit

26
Q

Risk Factors for Antiseizure Medication Nonadherence

A

1) Frequent daily dosing
2) Antiseizure medication polytherapy
3) adolescents or young adults
4) lower socioeconomic status
5) minority patients (e.g. African American)
6) psychiatric factors such as mood, anxiety, or cognition

27
Q

Methods to Aid in Antiseizure Medication Adherence

A

1) Reminders
Smartphone alarm, smartphone app, pill box, premeasured pill packets

2) Supervision
Recruitment of family or friends, home health care, pill dispensers/ compliance auditors, school administration

3) Medication
Change from antiseizure medication with short half-life to one with long half-life, fill every 3 months instead of every month, alter scheduling to coincide with other cues

4) Programmatic intervention
Behavioral counseling, educational counseling

28
Q

Seizure precipitants

A

Stress
Sleep-deprivation
Fever or illness
Sleep
Fatigue
Heat or humidity
Menses
Flashing light
Caffeine
Fasting
Alcohol

29
Q

1) Definition of breakthrough epilepsy and 2) from which epilepsy types must be distinguished

A

1) A breakthrough seizure is defined as one that occurs despite the use of antiseizure medications that have otherwise successfully prevented seizures in the patient in the past. Breakthrough seizures interrupt a period of apparent seizure remission in a patient with known epilepsy
The duration of the seizure remission period (the minimum interseizure interval) needed to be considered seizure free varies with inherent seizure frequency. The International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) defines seizure free or medically responsive epilepsy as seizure freedom for 12 months or 3 times the longest previous interseizure interval, whichever is longer

2) Must be distinguished from
a) Reflex epilepsy: seizures are provoked objectively and consistently by specific stimuli or activities in patients who otherwise lack spontaneous seizures
b) acute symptomatic epilepsy: seizures occur in patients with or without epilepsy and are provoked at the time of an acute, and usually severe, epileptic insult (e.g. proconvulsant medication, illicit drug or alcohol withdrawal)

30
Q

Steps in evaluation of breakthrough seizures

A

1) acute symptomatic seizures (the result of a new acute epileptogenic injury or progression in a patient with a progressive epileptic disorder) should be considered
2) either history, detective work such as pill counts, or drug levels should establish adherence
3) if adherent, antiseizure medication therapies should be optimized or changed, since breakthrough seizures can be considered as jumping over an inadequate seizure threshold
4) the physician should attempt to identify the seizure precipitants and help strategize their avoidance. If precipitants clearly appear to be present, avoidance strategies may be sufficient without changes in the antiseizure medication regimen
5) the clinician should inform the patient that adequate time be designated to consider the patient seizure free again (ie, using the rule of three to estimate how long the patient is required to be seizure free before being considered back in “safe territory”).

31
Q

Sleep suggestions used in counseling patients in sleep hygiene

A
  • Awaken at the same time every day (eg, 6:30 AM or 7:00 AM) and do something active and in the light upon awakening
  • No sleep “when the sun is up” (don’t steal from nighttime sleep)
  • Give yourself at least an 8-hour window for sleep, and do something “boring” before going to bed
  • No caffeine past noon
  • No electronics in the bedroom (eg, smartphone, computer, television)
32
Q

Potential remediable factors in drug resistant epilepsy

A

alcohol or drug abuse
abuse of caffeine
the use of concomitant medications that can reduce the seizure threshold
sleep deprivation
poor compliance with prescribed treatment

33
Q

Medications that lower the seizure threshold

A

https://www.uptodate.com/contents/image?imageKey=NEURO%2F106961&topicKey=NEURO%2F2219&search=Medications%20that%20lower%20the%20seizure%20threshold&rank=1~150&source=see_link