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An active-control trial of lamotrigine monotherapy for partial seizures

Gilliam, F; Vazquez, B; Sackellares, J C; Chang, G Y; Messenheimer, J; Nyberg, J; Risner, M E; Rudd, G D
OBJECTIVE: We report the results of a double-blind, double-dummy, active-control study designed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of lamotrigine (LTG) administered as monotherapy to adult outpatients with partial seizures. BACKGROUND: The effectiveness of LTG as add-on therapy for partial seizures in adults has previously been established. METHODS: After an 8-week baseline during which patients continued their baseline antiepileptic drug (carbamazepine or phenytoin monotherapy), 156 patients were randomly assigned to receive increasing doses of LTG (target 250 mg b.i.d.) or valproic acid (VPA; target low dose of 500 mg b.i.d.) during the first 4 weeks of an 8-week transition period. Carbamazepine or phenytoin was withdrawn over the next 4 weeks; then patients entered a 12-week monotherapy period. Study drug treatment was discontinued in patients who met predetermined escape criteria for seizure worsening. RESULTS: More patients receiving LTG were successfully maintained on monotherapy compared with patients receiving VPA (56% versus 20%; p < 0.001). The time to meet the escape criteria was also significantly longer in LTG-treated patients (median = 168 days) than in VPA-treated patients (median = 57 days; p = 0.001). The incidence of adverse events during the monotherapy period was lower than during the transition period. Four LTG patients and five VPA patients reported serious adverse events. Two of those patients experienced a rash that led to withdrawal soon after adding LTG to carbamazepine. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that LTG is effective and well tolerated when administered as monotherapy in adult patients with partial seizures.
PMID: 9781523
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 563652

Frontal functions in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy

Devinsky O; Gershengorn J; Brown E; Perrine K; Vazquez B; Luciano D
The authors investigated cognition in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME), focusing on frontal functions as suggested by maximal spatial distribution of epileptiform activity seen over frontocentral regions. Fifteen patients with JME (mean age, 34.3 years; mean estimated IQ 101) were administered a battery of tests sensitive to frontal dysfunction. The number of patients with impaired test performance and the frequency of impairment per test were calculated. Performance on selected tests was compared with that of 15 patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) who were matched for estimated IQ using paired t-tests. Although the performance of the group with JME was not uniform--some patients showed marked impairment whereas others showed little or no deficit--a high frequency of impairment was found on tests of concept formation-abstract reasoning and mental flexibility, cognitive speed, and planning and organization. Significant differences were found between the group with JME and the group with TLE on tests requiring mental flexibility and concept formation-abstract reasoning. In conjunction with studies demonstrating intractable seizures in approximately 20% of patients, the results from this study suggest that JME is not a uniformly benign condition. Frontal deficits may have maladaptive behavioral consequences suggestive of personality dysfunction, as described anecdotally by previous investigators
PMID: 9359121
ISSN: 0894-878X
CID: 12233

Dissociation in epilepsy and conversion nonepileptic seizures

Alper K; Devinsky O; Perrine K; Luciano D; Vazquez B; Pacia S; Rhee E
PURPOSE: We examined the dimensionality of the item content of the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES) in relation to the clinical diagnosis of conversion nonepileptic seizures (C-NES) versus complex partial epilepsy (CPE). METHODS: The DES was administered to a sex- and age-matched sample of 132 patients with C-NES and 169 with CPE and was factor analyzed with principal components analysis (PCA) with varimax rotation. RESULTS: The mean total DES score was 15.1 in the C-NES group and 12.7 in the CPE group (p = 0.079). The factors obtained by PCA differentiated the CPE and C-NES groups more strongly than did the total DES score. The factor accounting for the most variance, interpreted as 'depersonalization-derealization,' was significantly greater in C-NES than CPE (p = 0.005). An 'absorption-imaginative involvement' factor, which included some of the clinical features of posttraumatic stress disorder was elevated only in subjects reporting histories of childhood abuse (p = 0.001) regardless of the diagnosis of CPE or C-NES. An 'amnestic' factor appearing to represent memory problems related to neurologic impairment showed a trend toward elevation in CPE (p = 0.056) and may have confounded the CPE versus C-NES distinction using total DES scores. CONCLUSIONS: The DES has separate underlying dimensions that appear to relate distinctively to depersonalization and derealization, childhood trauma, and neurologic impairment. The heterogeneous item content of the DES is a potential confound that should be appreciated when this instrument is used to study dissociation in neuropsychiatric populations
PMID: 9579937
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 12132

Multiple subpial transections in language cortex: Effects on language functions

Devinsky, O; Perrine, K; Pacia, S; Vazquez, B; Buchwald, J; Luciano, DJ
Multiple subpial transections (MST) were made in language cortex in 13 patients with medically refractory partial epilepsy. Transections were made in posterior language cortex in 12 patients and in both anterior and posterior language areas in 1. Eleven patients had additional resective surgery in the anterior temporal (n = 10) or anterior temporal and frontopolar (n = 1) regions. Eleven of the 13 patients had at least 90% reduction in seizure frequency. Dysnomia was present >6 months postoperatively in 9 patients (mild, 6; moderate, 3). Other deficits included impaired memory (mild, 3; moderate, 1) and reading (mild, 2). We compared the postoperative neuropsychologic findings in 7 patients with MST and temporal lobectomy with those in 14 patients who underwent only dominant temporal lobectomy. MST patients had significantly (p < 0.05) poorer postoperative naming, verbal fluency, and oral reading than patients with dominant temporal resections that spared language functions. MST in language areas can contribute to or cause language disorders that persist >1 year postoperatively. (C) 1997 by Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved
ISI:A1997YB79200008
ISSN: 0896-6974
CID: 104281

Multiple subpial transection for intractable partial seizures: Seizure outcome

Pacia, SV; Devinsky, O; Perrine, K; Luciano, DJ; Vazquez, B; Doyle, WK; Dogali, M; Abramson, HS
We studied 21 patients who underwent multiple subpial transections (MST) for the surgical treatment of intractable partial-onset seizures in whom the epileptogenic focus overlapped with primary sensorimotor or language cortex. All patients had intracranial EEG localization of seizures and functional mapping with electrical stimulation before surgery. Eighteen patients had cortical resections in addition to MST, At an average follow-up of 21 months, 13 patients either are seizure-free or are experiencing auras or simple partial seizures (SPS) only, 6 patients have had greater than 50% reduction in seizure frequency, 1 patient has had a modest reduction in seizures, and 1 patient is unchanged. MST in the 3 patients who did not undergo cortical resections reduced seizure frequency in all 3, although none are seizure-free. MST, combined with cortical resection, appears to be a safe and effective alternative to subtotal resection of the epileptogenic zone. MST alone, although not curative, reduced seizure frequency in all patients who underwent the procedure. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Inc
ISI:A1997WU51700008
ISSN: 0896-6974
CID: 104283

Clinical features of neocortical temporal lobe epilepsy

Pacia SV; Devinsky O; Perrine K; Ravdin L; Luciano D; Vazquez B; Doyle WK
Few studies have examined the clinical features of neocortical temporal lobe epilepsy (NTLE) in carefully selected patients. We reviewed records from 21 patients with NTLE, defined by intracranial electroencephalogram (EEG), who have been seizure free for 1 year or more following temporal lobectomy. The mean age of onset at the time of first seizure was 14 years (range, 1-41 years). Febrile seizures were reported in only 2 patients (9.5%). In contrast to prior mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) studies, seizure-free intervals between the initial cerebral insult or first seizure and habitual seizures were uncommon. Possible or known risk factors for epilepsy were reported in 13 of 21 patients (62%). Fifteen (71%) patients reported auras, with experiential phenomena being the most common type. Magnetic resonance imaging was normal or nonspecific in 15 patients, revealed mild hippocampal atrophy in 2, tumors in 2, and heterotopic gray matter and hippocampal atrophy in 1, and cortical dysgenesis in 1. Neuropsychological testing showed deficits consistent with the seizure focus in 13 patients (62%), and Wada test showed ipsilateral memory deficits in 10 (48%). The most common behavioral manifestation was a motionless stare at ictal onset (48%). In contrast to prior studies of MTLE, only 1 NTLE patient had frequent independent, contralateral temporal lobe epileptiform spikes on scalp EEG
PMID: 8957013
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 34436

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

SPANISH TRANSLATION AND ADAPTATION OF AN EPILEPSY QUALITY-OF-LIFE INSTRUMENT [Meeting Abstract]

VAZQUEZ, B; DEVINSKY, O; CRAMER, JA; PERRINE, K; CRUZ, RF; KANNER, AM
ISI:A1995TD34700419
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 52683

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

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