Searched for: person:od4
Clinical uses of the quality-of-life in epilepsy inventory
Devinsky O
The quality-of-life in epilepsy (QOLIE) inventory was designed to assess adult epilepsy patients. Responses to a draft 99-question inventory administered to patients with low to moderate seizure frequency will be used to generate two or three separate instruments. The largest and most comprehensive of these will serve as a research tool for investigators and may be helpful in designing studies that compare the effects of approved or investigational antiepileptic drugs. This instrument may also be useful in documenting patient outcomes following expensive diagnostic studies, such as video-electroencephalogram monitoring, or other therapeutic interventions, such as epilepsy surgery. An intermediate-sized instrument may serve as a clinical tool for neurologists and epileptologists. A brief instrument may serve as a quick clinical survey for primary care physicians, neurologists, and specialists in epileptology. The abbreviated clinical inventories are intended to provide rapid assessment of quality-of-life issues in the office setting. Such assessments can help physicians and patients identify previously unrecognized problems and may lead to changes in care
PMID: 8348903
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 57480
Anterior temporal language areas in patients with early onset of temporal lobe epilepsy
Devinsky O; Perrine K; Llinas R; Luciano DJ; Dogali M
Eighteen consecutive patients undergoing dominant temporal lobectomy underwent preoperative cortical stimulation for language localization. Patients with naming deficits on anterior (4.5 cm from the temporal pole) temporal lobe stimulation had earlier seizure onset vs those without such deficits (5.8 yr vs 12.9 yr; p < 0.04). There was a similar trend for reading errors (6.3 yr vs 12.4 yr; p < 0.052). Resections always spared at least 1 cm anterior to any language area. There was no significant difference in postoperative neuropsychological tests between patients with and without anterior language representation. Early onset of dominant temporal lobe seizure foci leads to a more widespread or atypical distribution of language areas. Individual variability should be considered in epilepsy surgery to reduce postoperative language deficits
PMID: 8239568
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 6357
Premonitory symptoms in epilepsy
Hughes J; Devinsky O; Feldmann E; Bromfield E
We studied premonitory symptoms in 128 patients with partial and 20 patients with primary generalized epilepsy. Sixty symptoms were reported by 43 (29%) patients, all of whom had partial seizure disorders (P < .01). Symptoms began at least 30 minutes before seizure onset, lasted 10 minutes to 3 days, and were continuous. Irritability, depression, headache, 'funny feeling', and confusion were the most common symptoms. Premonitory symptoms are a warning system in some patients and may permit therapeutic interventions
PMID: 8162384
ISSN: 1059-1311
CID: 6410
Ictal and postictal apraxia
Devinsky O; Vazquez B; Perrine K; Luciano DJ
Presents the cases of 2 right-handed patients (a 62-yr-old man and a 24-yr-old woman) with ictal and postictal apraxia. The Ss were unable to perform previously learned motor tasks either during or after a partial seizure arising in the left temporal region with rapid spread to the left frontoparietal areas. The Ss were able to recall and clearly describe the apraxic nature of their deficit. These cases are consistent with an apraxia resulting from inhibition of dominant hemisphere association cortex subserving complex motor acts.
PSYCH:1994-22148-001
ISSN: 0894-878X
CID: 8155
Crying seizures [Case Report]
Luciano D; Devinsky O; Perrine K
We report seven patients with crying during video-EEG-documented simple or complex partial seizures. During simple partial seizures, crying occurred with or without appropriate affect. Crying occurred postictally in two patients and was associated with persistent spiking in one of them. Six patients had ictal activity in the nondominant hemisphere, maximal in the anteromesial temporal region in five and in the mesial frontal region in another. These cases support theories proposing a lateralization of emotion, with right hemisphere dominance for negative affective states
PMID: 8413975
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 56559
Multiple subpial cortical transections for the control of intractable epilepsy in exquisite cortex [Case Report]
Dogali M; Devinsky O; Luciano D; Perrine K; Beric A
In 5 cases suffering from intractable seizures and ictal onset in exquisite (primary somatosensory or language related) cortex, surgical therapy has been done consisting wholly or in part of multiple subpial transections. In two cases with involvement of the primary somatosensory cortex, good seizure control without detectable neurological deficit was achieved. In the other three cases with involvement of the language cortex, deficits were minimal and cleared with time. Patients became seizure-free
PMID: 8109292
ISSN: n/a
CID: 56520
Nonepileptic seizures and childhood sexual and physical abuse
Alper K; Devinsky O; Perrine K; Vazquez B; Luciano D
Nonepileptic seizures (NES) must be distinguished from epilepsy to avoid the adverse effects of unnecessary antiepileptic drugs and to initiate appropriate psychiatric treatment. A higher frequency of prior sexual abuse has been suspected in NES, although no prospective controlled study has compared patients with NES and epilepsy. A series of patients with conversion disorder presenting as epilepsy and 140 patients with complex partial epilepsy (CPE) without evidence of conversion were selected from a series of consecutive admissions to a comprehensive epilepsy center. The groups did not differ with respect to age, years of education, race, or marital status, but the percentage of women was greater in the conversion NES group (73.2%) than in the CPE control group (50.7%; p < 0.002). The frequency of a history of sexual or physical abuse was greater in the NES group (32.4%) than in the CPE controls (8.6%; p < 0.000). Severity of sexual but not physical abuse was significantly greater in the NES group relative to controls (p < 0.05). There was a trend for a closer relationship of the perpetrator of sexual abuse to the victim among the NES patients compared with CPE controls (p < 0.1). These results support the impression that childhood abuse is more common among patients with conversion NES than with epilepsy, and suggests that in some cases childhood abuse may be a contributory pathogenetic factor
PMID: 8413951
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 56494
Epilepsy surgery
Devinsky O; Pacia S
Epilepsy surgery is assuming greater importance in treating patients with partial epilepsy whose seizures are uncontrolled with antiepileptic drugs. Many good candidates for surgical treatment are not presented with the option of surgery. The evaluation for epilepsy surgery is extensive and includes several stages of noninvasive and invasive testing. As more sophisticated noninvasive tests develop, fewer patients require invasive monitoring studies such as depth or subdural electrodes. The principal forms of surgical treatment include focal resection, corpus callosotomy, and hemispherectomy. Temporal lobectomy remains the most common and effective form of epilepsy surgery. Frontiers of epilepsy surgery include resective surgery for intractable infantile spasms and multiple subpial transections for patients whose seizure foci are in sensory, motor, or languages cortex. Additional studies are needed to define the safety and efficacy of these new procedures
PMID: 8272040
ISSN: 0733-8619
CID: 13056
Epilepsy education in medical schools: report of the American Epilepsy Society Committee on Medical Student Education
Devinsky O; Lowenstein D; Bromfield E; Duchowny M; Smith DB
The education of medical students about epilepsy is often fragmentary and incomplete. Basic information regarding the classification of epileptic seizures, epilepsy syndromes, first aid for seizures, and practical use of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) may not be covered in medical school curricula. In this report we describe reasons why the study of epilepsy provides a relatively unique opportunity to integrate concepts related to basic neuroscience and clinical neurology. Furthermore, we present a curricular framework that may prove useful for the education of medical students about epilepsy
PMID: 8404729
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 13074
Lateralizing significance of head and eye deviation in secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizures
Kernan JC; Devinsky O; Luciano DJ; Vazquez B; Perrine K
We studied 92 secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizures (SGTCS) in 29 patients with a clearly lateralized seizure focus using video-EEG telemetry. An examiner, blind to the EEG, reviewed direction and type (forced versus nonforced) of head/eye deviation (HD). Forced HD consisted of sustained, unnatural tonic or clonic movements. Nonforced HD consisted of sustained deviations that were neither tonic nor clonic and were similar to volitional head movements. Eighty-three of the 92 SGTCS (26 of 29 patients) had lateralized and sustained HD. The direction of HD was contralateral in over 90% of seizures when the movement either (1) continued as the seizure generalized, or (2) occurred in the 10 seconds prior to generalization. The direction of HD was ipsilateral in over 90% of seizures if the movement ended before the seizure began to generalize (in all cases, the movement ended more than 10 seconds before generalization). HD occurring within the first 10 seconds after seizure onset was not of lateralizing significance. Forced HD was 89% contralateral, while nonforced HD was not of lateralizing significance. HD in SGTCS provides information on seizure focus lateralization
PMID: 8327129
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 13121