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Seizures. Tutor : Professor V. Wong Presentation by : Daniel Tsang, Dragon Man, Michele Yuen. Outline of Presentation. Some basic terminologies Brief overview of seizures Video demonstrations. Part 1: Basic Terminologies. Some stuff you probably know already…. Epilepsy :
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Seizures Tutor: Professor V. Wong Presentation by: Daniel Tsang, Dragon Man, Michele Yuen
Outline of Presentation • Some basic terminologies • Brief overview of seizures • Video demonstrations
Some stuff you probably know already… • Epilepsy: • group of syndromes • characterized by paroxysmal transient disturbances of the brain function • Seizure: a single episode of epilepsy
Consciousness • Consciousness: awareness or responsiveness to external stimuli • Awareness: contact with events during the period in question • Responsiveness: ability to carry out simple commands or willed movement
Drowsiness or somnolence • Drowsiness or somnolence: sleep state from which the patient can be aroused to make appropriate motor and verbal responses • Stupor: state from which the patient can be aroused by painful or other vigorously applied stimuli to make avoidance movements
Aura • component of seizure which occurs before consciousness is lost and for which memory is retained afterwards • In seizures that occur without lost of consciousness, the aura is the whole seizure
Automatisms • Involuntary motor activity occurring during the state of clouding of consciousness either in the course of, or after an epileptic seizure • Continuation of an activity that was going on when the seizure occurred vs. new activity developed in associated with the ictal impairment of consciousness • Related to discharge in the limbic system
Types of Automatisms • Eating automatisms • Automatisms of mimicry • Gestural automatisms • Ambulatory automatisms • Verbal automatisms → Absence seizures Complex partial + absence seizures
Partial seizures Consciousness Hemispheric involvement Simple partial seizure Intact Unilateral; Bilateral involvement rare Complex partial seizure Impaired Primarily unilateral; often bilateral in course of seizure
Simple partial seizure Several types: • With motor signs • With somatosensory or special sensory symptoms • Seizures with autonomic symptoms • With psychic symptoms
Simple partial seizures with motor signs • Strictly focal • Spread to contiguous cortical area → sequential involvement of body parts • “Epileptic march” / Jacksonian seizure • Presentations: • Head turns to one side (usually contralateral to discharge) • Speech arrest / vocalization • Epileptic palilalia • Todd’s paralysis • Epilepsia partialis continua
Simple partial seizure with somatosensory or special sensory symptoms • Somatosensory • “pins-and-needles / numbness • Proprioception or spatial perception disorders • Special sensory • Visual: flashing lights, structured visual halluncinations • Auditory: crude auditory sensations, highly integrated functions (e.g. music) • Olfactory: unpleasant odours • Gustatory: crude (salty, sour, sweet, bitter), sophisticated (‘metallic’) • Vertiginous: falling in space, floating, totatory vertigo
Simple partial seizures with autonomic symptoms • Vomiting • Pallor • Flushing • Sweating • Piloerection • Pupil dilatation • Borborygmi • Incontinence
Simple partial seizure with psychic symptoms • Dysphasia: motor, sensory, global aphasia • Dysmnesic: distortion of time sense, deja-vu, jamais-vu, deja-entendu, jamais-entendu, panoramic vision • Cognitive disturbances: dreamy state, distortion of time sense, unreality, depersonalization • Affective: extreme pleasure or displeasure, fear, anger, rage • Illusions: objects appear deformed • Structured hallucination
Complex partial seizure • Gradualimpairment of consciousness (c.f. abrupt impairment in absence seizures) • Presentations: • Limited to impairment of consciousness • With additional psychic, motor and autonomic symptoms
Absence seizures • Sudden in onset, interruption of ongoing activities, blank stare • Non-responsive • Vanish in second • Atypical • Can associate with other components • Tonus, clonus, automatism
Myoclonic seizures • Sudden, brief • Generalized to individual muscle group • Ddx • Spinal cord, brainstem and cortices lesions
Clonic seizure • Generalized seizure sine tonic component • Postictal phase is usually short • May progress to tonic phase, clonic-tonic-clonic seizure
Tonic seizures • Rigid, violent muscular contraction fixing the limbs in some strained position • Deviated eyes, head towards one side, alteration in posture • Pale, flushed and ultimately livid
Tonic-clonic seizures • Vague ill-described warning • Tonic phase: • Sudden, sharp, tonic contraction of muscles (+ stridor), cyanosis • Fall on ground, tongue bitten, urine incontinence • Clonic phase: • Grunting • drooling • Deep respiration, all muscle relax, remain unconscious for variable time, • Awake with soreness and drowsiness, deep sleep
Atonic seizures • Sudden reduction in muscle tone • Head drop, slacking of jaw, dropping of limb or slumping to the ground • Drop attack • Ddx: brainstem ischaemia, narcolepsy
CS 2 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS2.AVI
CS 2: Simple partial seizure with motor signs and march • No loss of consciousness • Rhythmic twitching of the fingers of the left hand, spreading through arm to shoulder • He held his affected hand • Simple partial seizure with motor signs • Focal
CS 12 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS12.AVI
CS 12: Simple partial seizure with psychic symptoms and dysphasia • With dysphasic symptoms • Clicking of tongue, mumbling incomprehensible words and smiles • Fully understand commands but unable to speak properly
CS 15 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS15.AVI
CS 15: Complex partial seizure, simple partial onset, impairment of consciousness • Slight loss of postural tone • Preserved orientation reflex • Impaired consciousness
CS 17 • Patient was asked to hyperventilate in the beginning • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS17.AVI
CS 17: Complex partial seizure vs generalized absence • Patient suddenly stopped hyperventilating • Motionless and blank facial expression • Regain consciousness with told nurse her had vague stomach sensation • EEG: localized right frontal activity pre and postictally favours a partial seizure
CS 19 • Patient with right frontal ganglioglioma • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS19.AVI
CS 19: Complex partial seizure, impairment of consciousness at onset • Sudden sat up and started to roll about • Lying on his belly • Manipulated his genitals (frontal automatism)
CS 20 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS20.AVI
CS 20: Simple partial seizure with secondary generalization • Left arm started jerking • Still responsive • Coarse jerking of arms, stretching of back, tonic contraction of face, open mouth • Loss of consciousness • Twitching of all limbs and head • Relaxation and postictal sleep
CS 23 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS23.AVI
CS 23: Typical absence seizure • Slight loss of tone in neck muscle when stop hyperventilation • Seizure started • Mild eyelid clonus • Regain responsiveness later
CS 29 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS29.AVI
CS 29: Generalized atypical absence seizure • Head drop gradually • Not responsive • Later responded to staff and gradually regain upright position
CS 30 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS30.AVI
CS 30: Generalized myoclonic seizure • Brief repetitive movements of the limbs
CS 32 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS32.AVI
CS 32: Generalized clonic seizure • Opening of eyes and massive myoclonic jerks • Continuous clonic movement of limbs • Repetitive vocalization with clonic movement of the chest
CS 33 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS33.AVI
CS 33: Tonic seizure • Gradual elevation of both hands and stopped walking • Took 2 steps and then passed urine • Bent body strongly forward but kept standing • Dropped handkerchief
CS 34 • D:\HMR_ROM1\AVI\CS34.AVI