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Clinical profile of patients with epileptic and nonepileptic seizures

Devinsky O; Sanchez-Villasenor F; Vazquez B; Kothari M; Alper K; Luciano D
Epileptic seizures (ES) and nonepileptic seizures (NES) often coexist in patients with treatment-refractory seizures. There are few data on ictal features of these different seizure types in the same patient. We identified 20 patients with ES from a group of 99 NES patients (ES/NES) and compared this group with patients with only ES or NES. All 20 ES/NES patients developed NES after ES. Clinical features of NES clearly differed from ES in 18 of 20 cases. In patients with ES/NES their ES were similar to seizures in patients with only ES, and their NES were similar to spells in patients with only NES. ES/NES patients were similar to ES patients in electrodiagnostic and neuroimaging studies, and similar to NES patients in psychiatric interviews and inventories. The clinical manifestations of ES and NES in the same patient are usually different. Both types of events may be stereotypic and can be distinguished and characterized during video-EEG recording. Determining what events are more prevalent or disturbing is critical. Psychiatric and antiepileptic drug treatment may be provided accordingly
PMID: 8649542
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 12601

ABUSE HISTORY AND ICTAL SEMIOLOGY OF NONEPILEPTIC PSYCHOGENIC SEIZURES [Meeting Abstract]

LUCIANO, D; BARKEN, M; DEVINSKY, O; PERRINE, K; ALPER, K
ISI:A1995TD34700640
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 86669

DISSOCIATION IN PATIENTS WITH EPILEPTIC AND NONEPILEPTIC SEIZURES [Meeting Abstract]

ALPER, K; DEVINSKY, O; PERRINE, K; LUCIANO, D; VAZQUEZ, B; PACIA, S; ABRAMSON, H
ISI:A1995TD34700635
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 104295

Wada memory disparities predict seizure laterality and postoperative seizure control

Perrine K; Westerveld M; Sass KJ; Devinsky O; Dogali M; Spencer DD; Luciano DJ; Nelson PK
We examined the efficacy of a memory difference score (DS: right minus left hemisphere memory) during the Wada test (intracarotid amobarbital procedure, IAP) for predicting seizure laterality and postoperative seizure outcome in 70 left speech dominant patients from two epilepsy centers. DS > or = 2, after addition of 1 point to the left hemisphere injection score to account for aphasia, were noted in 71.4% of patients and correctly predicted surgery side for 98.0% of these patients. The DS related significantly to seizure outcome at 1-year follow-up (p < 0.002) and correctly predicted 80% of patients who were seizure-free. Patients whose DS did not correctly predict seizure laterality more frequently required invasive studies to establish seizure onset. The relationship of the DS to laterality did not differ significantly by class of IAP memory stimuli. When seizures originate from the temporal lobe, the IAP memory DS predicts seizure laterality by assessing the functional adequacy of the involved hemisphere and is predictive of seizure control
PMID: 7649124
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 6858

Correlates of arterial-filling patterns in the intracarotid amobarbital procedure

Perrine K; Devinsky O; Luciano DJ; Choi IS; Nelson PK
OBJECTIVE: To determine behavioral correlates of anterior cerebral artery (ACA) and posterior cerebral artery (PCA) perfusion patterns in the intracarotid amobarbital sodium procedure. DESIGN: Multivariate analysis of covariance and partial correlations of behavioral measures to ACA crossflow and PCA filling. SETTING: Angiography and the intracarotid amobarbital procedure at a comprehensive epilepsy center. SUBJECTS: Forty-two patients with intractable epilepsy (right-hemisphere seizure focus [n-23]; left-hemisphere seizure focus [n = 19]). MEASUREMENTS: Internal carotid angiography was performed both at a standard injection rate (8 mL of contrast per second) and at 1 mL/s, which matched the rate of the subsequent amobarbital injection. The degree of ipsilateral PCA and contralateral ACA filling were graded on a seven-point scale and compared with postinjection behavior, language, and memory measures. RESULTS: The ACA crossflow did not correlate significantly with that of any measure. The degree of PCA-filling pattern correlated significantly only with the level of consciousness (r = .31, P < .004), but it was not significant after accounting for the effects of seizure laterality, injection side, and amobarbital dosage. Neither ACA crossflow nor PCA filling correlated significantly with memory. The degree of ACA and PCA filling was overestimated at standard angiography (8 mL of contrast medium per second) injection rates. CONCLUSIONS: Although the degree of PCA filling correlates mildly with the level of consciousness postinjection, possibly by perfusion of thalamic or mesencephalic branches, it is not reliably predictive and is less contributory than the injection side and seizure laterality. The PCA filling is not required to produce valid memory assessment in the intracarotid amobarbital procedure, and ACA crossflow is not predictive of behavioral responses
PMID: 7619028
ISSN: 0003-9942
CID: 12754

Psychogenic basilar migraine: report of four cases [Case Report]

Sanchez-Villasenor F; Devinsky O; Hainline B; Weinreb H; Luciano D; Vazquez B
We discuss four patients with the clinical diagnosis of basilar migraine and suspected coexisting epilepsy who were referred to our epilepsy center. Their symptoms suggested episodic dysfunction in the distribution of the basilar artery, followed by pulsating headache with nausea. Verbal unresponsiveness and sensory symptoms occurred in all four patients; two also had focal paresis or jerking movements. Diagnostic studies excluded other disorders with similar symptoms. None of the patients improved with antimigraine or antiepileptic drugs. Provocation tests with suggestion elicited typical events in three patients and aura and headache in one patient. There were no EEG or ECG abnormalities during spontaneous or provoked episodes. Two patients improved with psychiatric treatment. Conversion disorder or malingering should be considered in patients whose symptoms of basilar migraine are atypical or refractory to treatment
PMID: 7617184
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 56844

Ictus emeticus: further evidence of nondominant temporal involvement [see comments] [Comment]

Devinsky O; Frasca J; Pacia SV; Luciano DJ; Paraiso J; Doyle W
We report two cases of ictal vomiting in patients who had left temporal lobe epilepsy. In one patient, vomiting developed when the discharge spread to the right temporal lobe as seen during depth electrode recording. In the second patient, ictal vomiting occurred with a restricted left temporal discharge, but the patient was left-handed and had right-hemisphere language dominance. These cases provide additional evidence of the involvement of the nondominant temporal lobe in ictus emeticus
PMID: 7783882
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 12767

Postictal psychosis: a case control series of 20 patients and 150 controls

Devinsky O; Abramson H; Alper K; FitzGerald LS; Perrine K; Calderon J; Luciano D
We compared clinical data, EEG, and video-EEG studies in a consecutive series of 20 patients with postictal psychosis (PP) to 150 consecutive epilepsy patients with complex partial (CPS) or generalized tonic-clonic (GTCS) seizures but without PP. There was a lucid interval between last seizure and onset of psychosis ranging from 2.3 to 72 h (mean, 25 h). Duration of PP ranged from 16 to 432 h (mean, 83 h). Age, sex, epilepsy type (partial vs. generalized), and history of febrile seizures were similar in the PP and control groups. Patients with PP had more frequent GTCS during monitoring than controls (2.8 vs. 1.3; P < 0.001). Patients with PP were more likely to have a history of encephalitis (P < 0.0001) and psychiatric hospitalization (P < 0.002). More patients with PP had bilateral interictal epileptiform discharges during monitoring than controls (P < 0.0002). Postictal psychosis most often develops in patients with bilateral dysfunction following a cluster of GTCS
PMID: 7796797
ISSN: 0920-1211
CID: 6818

Aspartame and seizure susceptibility: results of a clinical study in reportedly sensitive individuals

Rowan, A J; Shaywitz, B A; Tuchman, L; French, J A; Luciano, D; Sullivan, C M
The high intensity sweetener aspartame has been implicated anecdotally in seizure provocation. This possibility was investigated with a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over study. After an extensive search, 18 individuals (16 adults and 2 children) who had seizures allegedly related to aspartame consumption were admitted to adult or pediatric epilepsy monitoring units where their EEG was monitored continuously for 5 days. Aspartame (50 mg/kg) or identically enpackaged placebo was administered in divided doses at 0800, 1000, and 1200 h on study days 2 and 4. All meals were uniformly standardized on treatment days. No clinical seizures or other adverse experiences were observed after aspartame ingestion. Mean plasma phenylalanine (Phe) concentrations increased significantly after aspartame ingestion (83.6 microM) as compared with placebo (52.3 microM). Results suggest that aspartame, in acute dosage of approximately 50 mg/kg, is no more likely than placebo to cause seizures in individuals who reported that their seizures were provoked by aspartame consumption
PMID: 7614911
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 102082

Psychiatric classification of nonconversion nonepileptic seizures

Alper K; Devinsky O; Perrine K; Vazquez B; Luciano D
OBJECTIVE: To determine the frequency and type of non-conversion nonepileptic seizures (NES). BACKGROUND: Although conversion disorder is the most common psychiatric disorder among patients with NES, many patients with nonepileptic paroxysmal behavioral events have other psychiatric disorders, with natural histories and treatments different from those of conversion disorder. DESIGN: Retrospective review of a series of consecutive admissions for video-electroencephalography monitoring. All patients identified with NES were interviewed by a psychiatrist. Patients with conversion and other psychiatric disorders were divided into separate groups. SETTING: A comprehensive epilepsy center. RESULTS: Twenty-one patients evaluated for possible epileptic seizures had a psychiatric disorder other than conversion that accounted for their events. Among these patients, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Revised Third Edition (DSM-III-R) anxiety disorders (n = 9) were the most common diagnosed category, followed by all forms of psychotic disorders (n = 7) and impulse control problems in the setting of attention deficit disorder residual type (n = 2). In contrast to 71 patients with conversion NES seen over the same period of time, the non-conversion group showed no female predominance and the nonconversion patients were significantly less likely than the conversion patients to have been physically or sexually abused in childhood or adolescence. CONCLUSIONS: These results support the validity of the nosologic distinction of nonconversion from conversion NES and suggest that DSM-III-R anxiety disorders are an important diagnostic confound in clinical epilepsy
PMID: 7848132
ISSN: 0003-9942
CID: 12805