首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
The patient was a 35-year-old, unmarried male whose epileptic psvchomotor fits persisted since the age of 13. The author has observed the case for about 12 years, so that incomplete information concerning epileptic symptoms was considered to be compensated considerably by longitudinal observation, including ictal seizure and ictal EEG's. In this patient seizure with impaired consciousness which correspond rhvthmic slow waves of EEG tracing might be a nuclear sign; several kinds of automatism then might be considered as postictal phenomenon. The most important of all was tonic seizure of psvchomotor epilepsv particularlv in the face which was not seen in the petit mal epilepsv. With observation of ictal period as well as ictal EEG, differential identification of centrencephalic epilepsy and psychomotor epilepsy may not be totallv impossible. The case also showed a typical productive psychotic episodes of Landolt,3 which could be treated favorably by 10 mg of intravenous Haloperidol. This method, named as “pathologization” of Helmchen,2 was found by the present author as a useful treatmental means of choice.  相似文献   

2.
Yawning is an involuntary sequence of mouth opening, deep inspiration, brief apnea, and slow expiration. Few cases of yawning as a clinical sign of epileptic seizures, ictally or postictally, have been reported. We report the video/EEG documentation of yawning as an ictal sign in a 31-year-old patient affected by drug-resistant focal epilepsy symptomatic of bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria. Since the age of 10 she has had seizures characterized by yawning, staring, and eye blinking. Bilateral rhythmic frontotemporal spikes and waves characterized her EEG. We reviewed all reported cases and compared clinical and EEG features. We believe that yawning as part of an epileptic seizure might be considered a rare automatic behavior, like other automatisms frequently reported in epileptic seizures. Automatisms are more frequently described in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy, and involvement of the temporal lobe in most of the published cases may have led to this explanation. It is possible that yawning within epileptic seizures could be considered activation of distinct symptomatogenic cortex rather than a release phenomenon. This rare ictal manifestation should be recognized as epileptic to avoid misdiagnosis and treatment failure.  相似文献   

3.
《Brain & development》1997,19(5):353-358
The author presents clinical and electroencephalographic data of an epileptic girl, whose absences started at the age of 2. Based on seizure semiology, serial EEG and video-EEG recordings, 7 years of follow-up and other clinical data, the patient was diagnosed as having the PMA (‘perioral myoclonus with absences’) syndrome. There were some disagreement between clinical and EEG data, however, Finally, she became completely seizure free on valproate + lamotrigine medication. Detailed EEG and voltage mapping analysis disclosed that spike movements of ictal and interictal generalized spike-wave discharges showed always the same, very consistent, peculiar topographic pattern. This pattern was fundamentally different from spike patterns associated with typical absence seizures (recorded in other patients). Analysis of clinical, EEG and voltage mapping results suggest that actually this case might be rather classified as myoclonic epilepsy. The conjuction of this case to the PMA syndrome has been discussed.  相似文献   

4.
An interesting association of ictal hypopnea and ictal generalized EEG attenuation (IGEA) as possible marker of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is reported. We describe a 5-years-old girl with left focal seizures with secondary generalization due to right occipital cortical dysplasia presenting with ictal hypopnea and IGEA. She had repeated episodes of the ictal apnoea in the past requiring ventilator support and intensive care unit (ICU) admission during episodes of status epilepticus. The IGEA lasted for 0.26-4.68 seconds coinciding with the ictal hypopnea during which both clinical seizure and electrical epileptic activity stopped. Review of literature showed correlation between post-ictal apnoea and post ictal generalized EEG suppression and increased risk for SUDEP. The report adds to the growing body of literature on peri-ictal apnea, about its association with IGEA might be considered as a marker for SUDEP. She is seizure free for 4 months following surgery.  相似文献   

5.
OBJECTIVE: The epilepsies associated with the tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) are very often refractory to medical therapy. Surgery for epilepsy is an effective alternative when the critical link between the localization of seizure onset in the scalp and a particular cortical tuber can be established. In this study we perform analysis of ictal and interictal EEG to improve such link. METHODS: The ictal and interictal recordings of four patients with TSC undergoing surgery for epilepsy were submitted to independent component analysis (ICA), followed by source analysis, using the sLORETA algorithm. The localizations obtained for the ictal EEG and for the average interictal spikes were compared. RESULTS: The ICA of ictal EEG produced consistent results in different events, and there was good agreement with the tubers that were successfully removed in three of the four patients (one patient refused surgery). In some patients there was a large discrepancy between the localization of ictal and interictal sources. The interictal activity produced more widespread source localizations. CONCLUSIONS: The use of ICA of ictal EEG followed by the use of source analysis methods in four cases of epilepsy and TSC was able to localize the epileptic generators very near the lesions successfully removed in surgery for epilepsy. SIGNIFICANCE: The ICA of ictal EEG events may be a useful add-on to the tools used to establish the connection between epileptic scalp activity and the cortical tubers originating it, in patients with TSC considered for surgery of epilepsy.  相似文献   

6.
Ictal SPECT in Nonlesional Extratemporal Epilepsy   总被引:2,自引:2,他引:0  
Summary:  Purpose: Ictal single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) may be a reliable indicator of the ictal onset zone in patients with intractable partial epilepsy who are being considered for epilepsy surgery. The rationale for the illustrated case report is to evaluate the use of an innovation in SPECT imaging in a patient with nonlesional extratemporal epilepsy.
Methods: We investigated the presurgical evaluation and operative outcome in a patient with intractable partial epilepsy. The ictal semiology indicated a "hypermotor" seizure with bipedal automatism. The electroclinical correlation and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) did not suggest the appropriate localization of the epileptogenic zone. A subtraction periictal SPECT coregistered to MRI (SISCOM) was peformed.
Results: SISCOM revealed a region of localized hyperperfusion in the right supplementary sensorimotor area. Chronic intracranial EEG monitoring confirmed the relationship between the localized SISCOM alteration and the ictal onset zone. The patient was rendered seizure free after surgical treatment.
Conclusions: SISCOM may be used to identify potential candidates for surgical treatment of nonlesional extratemporal epilepsy. Periictal imaging may also alter the strategy for intracranial EEG recordings and focal cortical resection.  相似文献   

7.
Purpose: Ictal fear is an uncommon condition in which fear manifests as the main feature of epileptic seizures. The literature has suggested that ictal fear is generally associated with poor seizure outcomes. We wanted to clarify the variability in seizure outcome of children with ictal fear. Subjects and methods: We identified five pediatric patients with ictal fear who were followed up on at Okayama University Hospital between January 2003 and December 2012. We retrospectively reviewed their clinical records and EEG findings. Results: The onset age of epilepsy ranged from 8 months to 9 years and 10 months. The common ictal symptoms were sudden fright, clinging to someone nearby, and subsequent impairment of consciousness, which were often accompanied by complex visual hallucinations and psychosis-like complaints. Ictal fear, in four patients, was perceived as a nonepileptic disorder by their parents. Ictal electroencephalograms (EEG) of ictal fear were obtained in all patients. Three showed frontal onset, while the other two showed centrotemporal or occipital onsets. Two patients were seizure free at last follow-up, while seizures persisted in the other three. A patient with seizure onset during infancy had a favorable outcome, which was considered to be compatible with benign partial epilepsy with affective symptoms. Conclusion: Ictal fear is not always associated with a symptomatic cause or a poor seizure outcome. It is quite important to make a correct diagnosis of ictal fear as early as possible to optimize treatment.  相似文献   

8.
Frequently, epileptic seizures are accompanied by changes in the heart rate. They are usually transient and irrelevant for the patient's symptoms and the patient recorders his usually baseline rhythm in second or a few minutes. In this report we present a case of a patient diagnosed previously of epilepsy who presented episodes of dizziness and presyncope. During the video-EEG study we recorded one of these spells. The diagnosis of this spell was a focal seizure associated with asystole: the seizure was almost asymptomatic, and only when the asystole developed (40 seconds after the EEG ictal changes) the patient complained about dizziness. Recovery was fast, but treatment with pacemaker must be considered.  相似文献   

9.
Grant AC  Rho JM 《Epilepsia》2002,43(4):403-407
Band heterotopia (BH) or "double cortex" syndrome is a neuronal migration disorder resulting in a diffuse band of subcortical grey matter and variable abnormality of the overlying cortex. Patients with BH have a spectrum of psychomotor delay and seizures. Associated epileptic syndromes and interictal EEG findings have been described, but ictal EEG patterns are lacking. METHODS: We describe the clinical, interictal, and ictal EEG findings in two girls with BH and intractable seizures. RESULTS: Ictal EEG patterns correlated well with clinical seizure types, and did not have features unique to BH. Similarly, seizure behaviors and interictal EEG findings were typical of those seen in symptomatic generalized epilepsies. CONCLUSIONS: Despite evidence implicating the ectopic grey matter in seizure discharges, we conclude that seizure semiology and associated ictal EEG patterns in BH are no different from those seen in other causes of symptomatic generalized epilepsies.  相似文献   

10.
Ictal heart rate was investigated in otherwise subclinical epileptic seizures to test the hypothesis as to whether ictal tachycardia is physiological and not a physical or psychological stress response. In addition, we aimed to evaluate the localizing significance of pure ictal tachycardia. We included 21 epilepsy patients, who showed an ictal EEG seizure pattern during 22, otherwise subclinical seizures. All patients underwent ictal video-EEG recordings to evaluate the possibility of resective epilepsy surgery. The changes in heart rate in these patients were investigated in order to determine their relationship to localization and duration of EEG seizure patterns. Ictal tachycardia was observed in 41% of the otherwise subclinical seizures (nine out of 22), and significantly more often in seizures arising from the temporal lobe than from extratemporal regions (62% versus 11%, p < 0.0018). The seizure duration as defined by EEG was significantly positively correlated with an increase of heart rate (p = 0.043). Ictal heart rate can increase as a result of epileptic activation of autonomic cortex, reflecting a temporal lobe autonomic influence. Thus, measurement of heart rate should be included in the evaluation of otherwise subclinical epileptic seizures, because of its localizing value.  相似文献   

11.
A 59-year-old, right-handed woman had a paroxysmal polyoptic visual illusion, in which multiple copies of the object she saw spread horizontally in the left hemi-visual field. Polyopsia appeared for a few seconds. Neurological examination was normal. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed a tumor-like lesion involving the cortical and subcortical matters in the right mesial temporal regions. An interictal EEG showed frequent spikes in the right mesial temporal area and intermittent theta waves in the right fronto-temporal area. Video-EEG monitoring using the sphenoidal electrodes showed the seizure discharges originating in the right sphenoidal lead accompanying the polyoptic visual illusion. The seizure discharges were restricted within the right mesial temporal lobe. Paroxysmal visual illusion disappeared after administration of anti-epileptic drugs. EEG showed rare spikes in the right mesial temporal area. Polyopsia in this patient presumed to be associated with right mesial temporal lobe epilepsy because polyopsia and seizure activities on the ictal EEG were coupled and polyopsia ceased after administration of anti-epileptic drugs. Polyopsia is recognized as visual perseveration in space and a rare visual illusion. The lesion causing polyopsia has been reported to be mostly within posterior cerebral areas including occipital, parietal and temporal regions. This patient whose ictal polyopsia associated with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy is a very rare case because most reported cases presenting ictal polyopsia are neocortical temporal lobe epilepsy. The precise mechanism of polyopsia remains unknown. The mesial temporal lobe includes the hippocampus and parahippocampal formation that have been reported to receive information from the diverse association cortex and work as memory controllers. Ictal polyopsia may result from dysfunction of the visual association cortex or visual memory systems induced by the epileptic activities in the mesial temporal lobe. Polyopsia is a rare ictal semeiology of mesial temporal lobe epilepsy and may be one of the important ictal symptoms.  相似文献   

12.
We monitored cerebral blood volume (CBV) using near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) of two patients with symptomatic localization-related epilepsy who had no epileptic discharges in ictal scalp EEG. Case 1 was a 9-month-old boy who was suspected to have frontal lobe epilepsy. Although epileptic discharges were not identified on his ictal EEG due to motion artifacts, NIRS demonstrated an increase of CBV of the left brain during the seizure. Ictal single photon emission CT (SPECT) was dominant at the left side. Case 2 was a 3-year-old girl who was suspected to have temporal lobe epilepsy. Ictal EEG tracings, theta waves revealed prominent but did not enable identification of the focus. She had cortical dysplasia in the right cerebral hemisphere. NIRS monitoring demonstrated an increase in CBV in the right frontal region, which began 10 minutes before the seizure onset and lasted for 3 hours. Thus NIRS is a sensitive and non-invasive procedure for monitoring CBV changes during the seizure, and is useful in identification of the epileptic focus.  相似文献   

13.
Ictal fear is a semiological feature which is commonly associated with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. Here, we describe fear as a leading symptom in cryptogenic occipital lobe epilepsy. In a patient with negative MRI findings, intracranial EEG recordings documented a strict correlation between habitual ictal anxiety attacks and both spontaneous and stimulation-induced epileptic activity in a right occipital epileptogenic area with subsequent spreading to the symptomatogenic zone in the amygdala. Circumscribed occipital topectomy led to seizure freedom. Episodes of non-epileptic fear ceased shortly afterwards. This report provides insight into pathways of propagation of epileptic activity, illustrates different etiologies of pathologic fear and underlines the importance of ictal EEG recordings.  相似文献   

14.
Headache may be associated with seizures as a preictal, ictal, or postictal phenomenon, but it is often neglected because of the dramatic neurological manifestations of the seizure. Headache can also be the sole or predominant clinical manifestation of epileptic seizures, although this is a relatively rare condition. We describe two cases of focal symptomatic drug-resistant epilepsy with headache as the first ictal symptom. In both cases, the headache, which lasted a few seconds, was contralateral to the ictal discharge and did not have the clinical features of migraine. Ictal headache is a rare epilepsy symptom that can help to localize ictal EEG discharges. Recently, the term ictal epileptic headache has been proposed in cases in which headache is the sole ictal epileptic manifestation Diagnosis requires the simultaneous onset of headache with EEG-demonstrated ictal discharges.  相似文献   

15.
Headache may be associated with seizures as a preictal, ictal, or postictal phenomenon, but it is often neglected because of the dramatic neurological manifestations of the seizure. Headache can also be the sole or predominant clinical manifestation of epileptic seizures, although this is a relatively rare condition. We describe two cases of focal symptomatic drug-resistant epilepsy with headache as the first ictal symptom. In both cases, the headache, which lasted a few seconds, was contralateral to the ictal discharge and did not have the clinical features of migraine. Ictal headache is a rare epilepsy symptom that can help to localize ictal EEG discharges. Recently, the term ictal epileptic headache has been proposed in cases in which headache is the sole ictal epileptic manifestation Diagnosis requires the simultaneous onset of headache with EEG-demonstrated ictal discharges.  相似文献   

16.
ObjectivesBoth headache and epilepsy are frequent paroxysmal disorders that often co-occur or are related in numerous ways. Although ictal epileptic headache has become the focus of several studies, this remains a very rare and not well-known phenomenon. Electroclinical features, pathophysiology, and syndromic context are heterogeneous. We investigated the electroclinical and neuroimaging findings in a population of adult patients with ictal epileptic headache.MethodsWe retrospectively examined 8800 EEG recordings of almost 4800 patients admitted to our video-EEG laboratory from 2010 to 2013 with a history of well-documented epilepsy. We selected patients who reported headache closely related to a seizure documented by video-EEG or 24-hour ambulatory EEG. We analyzed ictal electroclinical features of headache, and we defined the related epileptic syndromes.ResultsWe identified five patients with ictal epileptic headache. Two patients described tension headache during an epileptic seizure. In three patients, the headache was accompanied by other “minor” neurological symptoms mimicking a migrainous aura. In all cases, the headache stopped with the end of the epileptic activity. Three patients had a history of partial symptomatic epilepsy with cerebral lesions (low grade glioma, astrocytoma, porencephalic cyst) in the left posterior regions, whereas two patients were affected by idiopathic generalized epilepsy.ConclusionThis study confirms the rarity of ictal epileptic headache. To date, well-documented video-EEG cases remain as exceptional reports, especially in cases of idiopathic generalized epilepsies. Moreover, we confirm the main involvement of posterior regions in patients with ictal epileptic headache affected by partial symptomatic epilepsies.  相似文献   

17.
Psychomotor seizures, referred to as limbic or partial complex seizures, have had an interesting evolution in diagnosis and treatment. Hughlings Jackson was the first to clearly relate the clinical syndrome and likely etiology to lesions in the uncinate region of the medial temporal lobe. With the application of electroencephalography (EEG) to the study of human epilepsy as early as 1934 by Gibbs, Lennox, and Davis in Boston, electrical recordings have significantly advanced the study of epilepsy. In 1937, Gibbs and Lennox proposed the term "psychomotor epilepsy" to describe a characteristic EEG pattern of seizures accompanied by mental, emotional, motor, and autonomic phenomena. Concurrently, typical psychomotor auras and dreamy states were produced by electrical stimulation of medial temporal structures during epilepsy surgery by Penfield in Montreal. In 1937, Jasper joined Penfield, EEG was introduced and negative surgical explorations became less frequent. Nevertheless, Penfield preferred to operate only on space occupying lesions. A milestone in psychomotor seizure diagnosis was in the year 1946 when Gibbs, at the Illinois Neuropsychiatric Institute, Chicago, reported that the patient falling asleep during EEG was a major activator of the psychomotor discharges and electrographic ictal episodes becoming more prominently recorded. Working with Percival Bailey, Gibbs was proactive in applying EEG to define surgical excision of the focus in patients with intractable psychomotor seizures. By early 1950s, the Montreal group began to clearly delineate causative medial temporal lesions such as hippocampal sclerosis and tumors in the production of psychomotor seizures.  相似文献   

18.
We studied all adult patients who between 1984 and 1989 were initially diagnosed at our hospital as having nonconvulsive status epilepticus. Thirty-two patients fulfilled the criteria, which included ictal EEG recordings. The annual incidence was 1.5 in 100,000 inhabitants. The median age at onset of status was 51 years. Ten patients had status as their first epileptic manifestation, but most patients had a previous history of epilepsy. Median duration of epilepsy at onset of status was 4 years. Fourteen patients had focal ictal seizure activity on EEG and thus met the criteria for complex partial status. Eighteen patients had generalized seizure activity on EEG, but only 6 of these had a history of absence epilepsy or juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. None had Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. The clinical features of status in the remaining 12 patients were in some respects similar to those of the patients with complex partial status. We hypothesize that the EEG seizure activity in these patients may have been generalized from an initial focus.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVE: Myoclonic epilepsy is a common epileptic syndrome with high genetic contribution. We described a pedigree in which 10 individuals presented with a non-progressive, adult-onset myoclonic epilepsy. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The pedigree was constructed and analyzed. Six affected members were studied with clinical grounds, mental status, neurophysiology, video-electroencephalographic (EEG), brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and mutational analysis of GABRA1 (GABRA1A, which endoces the alpha1 subunit of the gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor subtype A). Clinical and EEG data were collected from six unaffected members. RESULTS: Autosomal dominant hereditary was shown. The age of seizure onset was approximately 40. All the individuals had myoclonic seizures and a normal cognitive level. Bilateral symmetric jerks of the shoulders, arms or legs featured the myoclonic seizure. Ictally, the consciousness was not affected. The ictal EEG demonstrated bilateral spikes-and-waves. The occurrence of myoclonic seizures was not associated with sleepiness. Rare generalized tonic-clonic seizures occurred in two individuals. No absence or accompanying involuntary movements were observed. A lower dose of valproic acid (200-500 mg/D) (clonazepam 0.5 mg/D in a patient) was required to stop the myoclonic seizures. CONCLUSIONS: The clinical features of late adult-onset autosomal dominant myoclonic epilepsy are similar to juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME), which is a common generalized epileptic syndrome with a significant hereditary component. But the age of onset, rare association of other seizure patterns, and non-relation of seizure onset to sleepiness suggest that this may be a distinct familial epileptic syndrome different from recognized familial myoclonic epilepsies.  相似文献   

20.
We report a patient with juvenile myoclonic epilepsy who subsequently developed temporal lobe epilepsy, which gradually became clinically dominant. Video telemetry revealed both myoclonic seizures and temporal lobe seizures. The temporal lobe seizures were accompanied by a focal recruiting rhythm with rapid generalisation on EEG, in which the ictal EEG pattern during the secondary generalised phase was morphologically similar to the ictal pattern during myoclonic seizures. The secondary generalised seizures of the focal epilepsy responded to sodium valproate, similar to the myoclonic epilepsy. In this rare case of coexistent Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy and Temporal lobe epilepsy, the possibility of focal epilepsy recruiting a generalised epileptic network was proposed and discussed.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号