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EPILEPSY. Brenda Willis Regional Manager South West Region. Introduction. Epilepsy Society is the largest epilepsy charity in the UK Founded in 1892 Today: Research, Out Patients Clinics, Assessment Centre, Care Services, Training, Information Services and Awareness Raising.
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EPILEPSY Brenda Willis Regional Manager South West Region
Introduction • Epilepsy Society is the largest epilepsy charity in the UK • Founded in 1892 • Today: Research, Out Patients Clinics, Assessment Centre, Care Services, Training, Information Services and Awareness Raising
What is Epilepsy? • A neurological condition where there is a tendency for people to have repeated seizures that start in the brain • Symptom of underlying cause • There are more that 40 types of epileptic seizures • Up to 70% of people with epilepsy can have their epilepsy controlled by prescribed medication
Epilepsy in the UK – the facts • 1 in 20 people will have a single seizure during their lifetime • 1 in 50 people will develop epilepsy • Highest incidence in children and elderly • 75 people a day are newly diagnosed as having epilepsy (that’s 27,400 per year) • More than 1 in 100 people have epilepsy at any one time – more than half a million people…. • Figures from Joint Epilepsy Council
What causes epilepsy? • Structural damage tumour, scarring, lesions, stroke, drug or alcohol abuse, birth trauma, brain parasites • Infection Meniningitis, Encephalitis • Inherited causes Seizure threshold, tuberous sclerosis, neurofibromatosis • Unknown
What are epileptic seizures? Brief events caused by disturbances of brain activity that cause a change in the persons • Awareness • Behaviour • Emotion • Feelings • Movement
PROBLEM SOLVING SENSATION Different areas of the brain PERCEPTION ARMS LEGS EYES EARS MEMORY They communicate with each other through small electrical impulses
What is epilepsy? Usual activity A B Epilepsy A B
Seizures happen when… • …a message is not switched off after it has been passed on • disturbed activity causes a change in the way the brain is working = a seizure
Are all seizures the same..? • Focal Seizures • Affect part of the brain • Consciousness intact/impaired • Generalised Seizures • Affect all of the brain • Consciousness is lost Day One Training 10
Focal seizures • Simple Focal (also known as simple partial) Déjà vu, pins & needles, fear, twitching, warnings, auras • Complex Focal (also known as complex partial) Automatisms- lip smacking, chewing, screaming, posturing Secondarilygeneralised • When seizure activity spreads to affect all of the brain
Generalised seizures • Tonic Clonic - stiffening & jerking • Absence - brief lapse in awareness • Myoclonic - muscle jerk • Tonic - stiffening of muscles • Atonic - loss of muscle tone
Video Clips 007 Graham simple partial seizure.wmv 011 Terry complex partial seizure.wmv 014 Lloyd complex partial seizure.wmv 018 Priya - secondarily generalised seizure.wmv 032 Calum - atypical absences.wmv 034 Calum - myoclonic seizure.wmv
How to manage non-convulsive seizure • If the person becomes confused, wanders around or behaves oddly • Stay calm • Do not restrain but gently guide away from danger • Reassure, stay with them until fully recovered • If the person falls and recovers, with or without confusion • Reassure, check for injury and stay with them until fully recovered
How to manage a convulsive seizure During the seizure • Stay calm • Note the time • Stop others from crowding around • Put something soft under the person’s head • Don’t move them (unless in danger) • Don’t restrain the person • Don’t put anything in their mouth • Minimise embarrassment
After the seizure stops • Roll them into the recovery position and check their breathing • Stay with them, giving reassurance, until they have recovered fully
The Recovery Position • A - Move the patient's nearest arm, as though they are stopping traffic; • B - Lift the patient's furthest knee, and bring their furthest hand to the near side of their face; • C - Using the patient's knee as a lever, pull them onto your knees • D - Adjust the patient's position, as shown This information is provided by St John’s Ambulance on their website www.halifax.sja.org.uk
When should you call an ambulance - • If the person • stops breathing • was injured during the seizure • does not recover well • asks you to call an ambulance • “Status Epilepticus” • When a seizure does not stop by itself or • When one seizure follows another without time to recover in between With tonic clonic seizures “status” is a medical emergency
Patient journey • Funny turns • Collapses • Go to GP or A&E • Referred to Neurologist
Seizures that are not epilepsy • Heart conditions • Fainting (syncope) • Low blood sugar (hypoglycaemia) • Febrile convulsions (high temperature) • Psychological problems (dissociative) • Panic attacks
Investigations for Diagnosis • History & Witness statement • Electroencephalogram (EEG) • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) • Blood test • Electrocardiogram (ECG) • Ambulatory EEG • Video Telemetry • Computerised Tomography (CT or CAT) Day One Training 21
Patient journey (2) • Eye witness accounts of seizures • Tests trying to ruling things out ECG • EEG, MRI • Diagnosis of epilepsy Epilepsy Awareness
Seizure control or limitation • Anti Epileptic Drugs • Vagal Nerve Stimulation • Surgery
Triggers for seizures • Forgotten medication • Incorrect medication • “Recreational” drugs • Alcohol • Tiredness • Sleep deprivation • Stress • Unusual excitement • Boredom • Illness • High temperature • Hormonal changes • Flashing lights • Patterns • Sounds • OR OCCUR WITHOUT TRIGGERS
Patient journey (3) • Take these tablets • Come back in a month • Take these tablets • Come back in a month Epilepsy Awareness
Some side effects of AEDs • Nausea • Dizziness, headaches • Double vision • Skin rash • Weight gain • Change in mood • Change in behaviour (particularly children)
Exhaustion • Tiredness • Drowsiness • Below par • The smallest thing can be a huge effort • “Like wading through treacle”
Memory • Thought processes slowed down • Can’t remember names • Can be embarrassing • Learning memory techniques • Retraining brain
Social issues - “A sense of loss” • Self confidence/self esteem • Independence • Job & career prospects • Income • Social/leisure activities • Relationships • Driving Licence • Ability to care for children
Social issues - Other factors • Unpredictability of seizures • Hidden nature of the condition • Social stigma (real or perceived)
However………………….. • Laura Sandys (MP) • Edith Bowman • Rik Mayall • Dai Green • Neil Young • Max Clifford • Dean Ryan • Julius Caesar • Vincent Van Gogh
Epilepsy Research Tripartite: Epilepsy Society, UCL, and UCLH • Attracts funding and facilitates integration of basic science with clinical application • Developing new research programmes in both depth and breadth • Major strengths in applications of genetics and imaging, pharmacology and epidemiology • Application of low-power electronic device and microsensors to epilepsy is emerging growth area Further information on activities; awards & appointments; research grants; and research publications on website: www.epilepsysociety.org.uk.
Want to know more ? Please contact us : Helpline: Mon – Fri (9am-4pm) 01494 601400 Website: www.epilepsysociety.org.uk Regional Services: 01494 601391
join our digital community: www.epilepsysociety.org.uk/digital