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Introduction To Epilepsy Semiology diagnosis Treatment. M. Scott Perry, M.D. Emory University April 18, 2007 September 18, 2006. Objectives. Recognize different types of seizures. Discuss workup for new onset seizures
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Introduction To EpilepsySemiologydiagnosis Treatment • M. Scott Perry, M.D. • Emory University • April 18, 2007 • September 18, 2006
Objectives • Recognize different types of seizures. • Discuss workup for new onset seizures • Learn classification of epilepsy types based on history, seizure type, MRI, and EEG findings • Review common treatments used in epilepsy • Learn prognosis based on epilepsy type • Briefly review some frequently asked questions
Spells Seizure Seizure Equivalents GERD Breath Holding Infantile Masturbation Syncope Benign Sleep Myoclonus Symptomatic Electrolytes Trauma Ingestion Recurrent (Epilepsy)
Seizure Imitators • Benign Neonatal Sleep Myoclonus • Myoclonic jerks are focal, multifocal, unilateral or bilateral • 1-5 hz, distal>proximal • Begins in first weeks, diminishes by 2nd month, generally gone by 6 months • Episodes may be exacerbated by benzos
Seizure ImitatorsBreath Holding Spells • Incidence: 4.6% (population study, N=4980) • Onset: 6-18 months • 90% resolve by age 6y • cyanotic and pallid
CYANOTIC BREATH-HOLDING SPELLS • 60 % are cyanotic • stimulus triggered (anger, frustration) • short cry • breathing interrupted in expiration • cyanotic, limp, LOC • +/- sleep
COMPLICATED BREATH-HOLDING SPELLS • Breath-holding spells + seizure-like activity • usually more prolonged • 15% have complicated features • clonic activity follows LOC • stiffening
Seizures:What information is useful? • What was the patient doing when it started? Unresponsive?...are you sure? Asleep or awake? • Tell us exactly what you saw: • E.R.B.S.A.O? • Does it make anatomical sense? Same side, both sides, just arms, etc. • How long did it last?
Clinical Characteristics of Seizures in Neonates (Scher, et al 1989) • No accepted classification for neonatal seizures • 80 neonates with suspicious movements. Only 8 had electrographic seizures. • Focal/multifocal clonic: 44% epileptic • “Subtle seizures”-roving eye movements, arrest of behavior, lip smacking, autonomic-30% • Tonic(focal or generalized) 8% • Myoclonic 7%
Clinical Characteristics of Seizures in Neonates (Scher, et al. 1993) • 92 neonates with electrographic seizures (345 EEG recordings) • 48% had electroclinical event • Subtle 71%, clonic 41%, myoclonic 20%, tonic 9% • 34% with only electrographic events • 17/90 (19%) of paralyzed neonates had electrographic events
Clinical Seizures in Neonates • Gen. Tonic Clonic seizures don’t happen in neonates. • 69 infants, 101 seizures, only 4 resembled GTCS, none truly were. (Nordli, et al.) • Duration- average duration 2.25 minutes. Usually shorter, rarely longer. Intertictal recovery 8 minutes (Clancy and Legido, 1987) • Status Epilepticus- clinical SE is rare, electrographic may not be • 487 seizures, only 2 SE (Clancy, et al) • 33% FT infants, 9% PT (Scher, et al)
Seizure Semiology of Neonates Focal/Multifocal Clonic Tremors Subtle Tonic
Seizure Types Partial Generalized Simple Partial Complex Partial Partial Secondarily Generalized
Simple partial • Preserved consciousness • Isolated motor/sensory • Complex partial involves loss of consciousness
Partial Secondarily Generalized • Starts partial, rapidly spreads • You have to ask the questions to get the answers
Partial Seizure Clues • Contralateral • Head Deviation, Eye Deviation, Dystonic Posturing, Unilateral Clonic Activity, Postictal Paralysis • Ipsilateral • Automatisms, Eye Blinking, Nose Wiping
Differentiating Seizure Types - Semiology Head and Eye Deviation Partial Seizures
What do you see? 1. Head Deviation 2. Automatism 3. Eye Deviation 4. Unilateral Dystonic/Clonic Activity
Seizure Types Generalized Partial Generalized Tonic Clonic Tonic Clonic Atonic Myoclonic Absence Simple Partial Complex Partial Partial Secondarily Generalized
Generalized Seizure Myoclonic • Characterized by quick, arrhythmic, and symmetric/asymmetric movements • Often not reported by patients. • Ask about sudden falls or dropping objects
See the Difference? Myoclonic-fast, jerking motion Clonic-rhythmic
Semiology Typical Absence Seizures • Characterized by brief, abrupt impairment of consciousness associated with EEG demonstrating 3 Hz spike and slow wave complexes with normal interictal background • May also demonstrate: • mild clonic, tonic, or atonic components • automatisms • autonomic components Panayiotopoulos “The Epilepsies: Seizures, Syndromes, and Manangement
Generalized Seizure Semiology Infantile Spasms
Review So Far • Common seizure imitators in pediatrics • Seizures come in two basic types. You have to ask the right questions to distinguish them • Now...how do you diagnose epilepsy (i.e. when is EEG/MRI necessary) and why do we care?
Epilepsy Types Partial Generalized Idiopathic Cryptogenic Benign Rolandic Epilepsy Benign Occipital Epilepsy Cryptogenic Idiopathic Symptomatic Childhood Absence Juvenile Absence Juvenile Myoclonic Grand Mal Upon Awakening West Syndrome Lennox-Gastaut Symptomatic • Primary = Idiopathic = presumed genetic • Secondary = Symptomatic=underlying cerebral cause (i.e. injury, dyplasia, etc.)
Idiopathic Partial Epilepsy Benign Rolandic Epilepsy (Benign Childhood Epilepsy with Centro-Temporal Spikes) • Onset 1-14 years, 75% between 7-10 years of age • Prevalence is 15% of children with seizures • Characterized by infrequent, often single, focal seizures consisting of unilateral facial sensorimotor symptoms, oropharyngolaryngeal manifestations, speech arrest, or hypersalivation lasting 1-2 minutes • 1/3 -2/3 will have secondarily generalized seizures • 75% are nocturnal • MRI normal • Typical EEG
Benign Rolandic Epilepsy Prognosis/Treatment • 2-3% school age children have CT spikes with <10% having BRE • Remission usually within 2-4 years from onset and before the age of 16 years • Less than 2% will develop infrequent generalized seizures in adulthood • Treat or not to treat
Benign Occipital Epilepsy Gastaut Type • Onset 3-15 years • Manifest as visual hallucinations, blindness, or both-lasting seconds to <3 minutes • Rarely terminate with hemiconvulsions or generalized convulsion • 50% have postictal headache • Similar manifestation to seizures from occipital lesions - MRI needed • Typical EEG
Benign Occipital Epilepsy Fixation-Off EEG
Benign Occipital Epilepsy Prognosis/Treatment • Remission occurs 2-4 years from onset for 50-60% of patients • Dramatic response to carbamazepine in >90% • 15% association with celiac disease
Symptomatic Partial Epilepsy • Abnormal MRI (stroke, dyplasia, etc.) or abnormal EEG without classic pattern • History not consistent with primary partial epilepsy • Prognosis varies
Secondary Partial Epilepsy - MRI Heterotopia Mesial Temporal Sclerosis
Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Childhood Absence Epilepsy • Onset 2-10 years, peak 5-6 years • 2/3 are females • Abrupt cessation of activity or speech last 4-20 seconds followed by return to baseline • Normal MRI • Typical EEG with 3Hz SW often provoked with HV
Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Childhood Absence Epilepsy
Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Childhood Absence Epilepsy Prognosis/Treatment • Remission often occurs before 12 years of age • Less than 10% develop infrequent generalized tonic clonic seizures in adolescence or adult life • Rarely will patients continue to have absence seizures as adults • Treatment with valproic acid, ethosuximide, or lamotrigine will control absences in >80% • Possible role for topiramate and levetiracetam
Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Juvenile Absence Epilepsy • Age of onset 9-13 years • 80% suffer from GTCS and 15-25% have Myoclonic seizures with onset 1-10 years after absences • Frequent/severe absences • Absence status in 20% • Prognosis: 70-80% will be controlled, though this is a lifelong disorder • 20% may have intractable absences and GTCS
Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy • Characterized by myoclonic jerks upon awakening starting in adolescence • GTCS (>90%) may begin a few months later, occasionally earlier • Absence seizures (33%), if present, begin between 5-16 years • M:F equal • Seizure precipitants: Sleep deprivation, alcohol, stress, video games
Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy • EEG: irregular generalized 3-6hz spike/polyspike-slow wave discharges and generalized fragments. 33% have photoparoxysmal responses
Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy Treatment/Prognosis • Valproic Acid, levetiracetam most commonly used monotherapy treatment • Lamotrigine, clonazepam • Prognosis: Seizures well controlled in up to 90% of patients. Treatment is lifelong, as 80% relapse after drug withdrawal • Carbamazepine, oxcarbazepine, phenytoin, gabapentin, tiagabine, and vigabatrin are contraindicated • Lifestyle management with regards to alcohol use, sleep deprivation, etc.
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Infantile Spasms West Syndrome “...these bobbings...they come on whether sitting or lying; just before they come on he is all alive and in motion...and then all of a sudden down goes his head and upwards his knees; he then appears frightened and screams out. --W.J. West (1841)
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Infantile Spasms West Syndrome • Onset between 3-12 months, peak at 5 months • Incidence: 3-5/10,000 • Spasms are flexor, extensor, or combined • Clusters with 20-150 seizures per day, occurring most often on awakening or prior to sleep • Developmental delay preceeds spasms in 2/3 • Classified as symptomatic, probably symptomatic, and cryptogenic
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Infantile Spasms West Syndrome • 80% symptomatic with most caused by pre-, peri-, or post-natal insults (i.e. HIE, ICH, dysplasias, trauma) • 50% of patients with TS have spasms • 3% of patients with Trisomy 21 • Aicardi’s syndrome (spasms, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and retinal lacunes • EEG demonstrates hypsarrhythmia • High voltage, chaotic, arrhythmic and asynchronous which becomes more synchronous in NREM sleep • Multifocal independent spike wave discharges • Periods of electrodecrement
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Infantile Spasms West Syndrome
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Infantile Spasms Prognosis • Spasms typically will remit, even without treatment, by 18 months of age • 60% of patients develop other seizure types, CPS and Lennox-Gastaut syndrome are most common • 90% of patients have developmental delay, 66% are severely cognitively impaired
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Infantile Spasms Treatment • ACTH - 50% remission, all or none. No proven dosing regimen, no clear reason why it works • Topiramate - similar efficacy usually in high doses (25-30mg/kg/d) • Vigabatrin - especially useful in TS (90%), beware of irreversible visual field defects • Pyridoxine, valproate, zonisamide, levetiracetam, lamotrigine, felbatol, keto diet • Surgery
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome • Three criteria • Multiple intractable seizures including tonic (80-100%), atypical absence (66%), and atonic (50%) • cognitive and behavioral abnormalities • Slow (<2.5 Hz) generalized spike wave • Onset 1-7 years, peak 3-5 • 10-30% develop from West syndrome or other epileptic encephalopathies
Symptomatic Generalized Epilepsy Lennox-Gastaut Syndrome