4 research outputs found
Epileptic monocular nystagmus and ictal diplopia as cortical and subcortical dysfunction
AbstractWe present the case of a patient with ictal monocular nystagmus and ictal diplopia who became seizure-free after resection of a right frontal focal cortical dysplasia (FCD), type 2B. Interictal neuroophthalmological examination showed several beats of a monocular nystagmus and a spasm of the contralateral eye. An exclusively ictal monocular epileptic nystagmus could be an argument for an exclusively cortical involvement in monocular eye movement control. The interictal findings in our patient, however, argue for an irregular ictal activation of both the cortical frontal eye field and the brainstem
De novo aphasic status epilepticus: Finally making the diagnosis by long-term EEG
Kantzeli A, Brandt C, Tomka-Hoffmeister M, Wörmann F, Bien C. De novo aphasic status epilepticus: Finally making the diagnosis by long-term EEG. Epilepsy & Behavior Reports. 2022;17: 100513.Aphasic status epilepticus (SE) is a rare manifestation of non-convulsive SE (NCSE) and may occasionally be under-recognized. We report a 69-year-old male patient with a pre-existing left parietal oligodendroglioma WHO III after two resections and radio-chemotherapy. The patient was left with some word finding difficulties but had no history of overt seizures. He developed aphasic NCSE, which was only detected by long-term electroencephalography (EEG) monitoring. The 24-hour EEG revealed paroxysmal rhythmic theta-delta activity in left posterior regions that propagated to left temporo-parietal areas. Rhythmic activity appeared every 15-30min and lasted for 10-110s. Aphasia was continuously present with superimposed short-lasting clinical deteriorations during the day. Magnetic resonance imaging showed peri-ictal edema on diffusion-weighted images in the insula and fronto-parietal cortex, which supported the diagnosis of SE. NCSE persisted for seven months. The patient recovered upon addition of intravenous phenytoin. One should not only consider aphasic SE when language impairment is episodic, but also when there are prolonged manifestations, especially when the typical differential diagnoses have been excluded. Intravenous therapy may be required to terminate NCSE. With this report, we would like to draw attention to aphasic SE as a rare phenomenon that may be difficult to diagnose and delay management in clinical practice. © 2021 The Author(s)
Unilateral autoscopic phenomena as a lateralizing sign in focal epilepsy
Hoepner R, Labudda K, Hoppe M, et al. Unilateral autoscopic phenomena as a lateralizing sign in focal epilepsy. Epilepsy & Behavior. 2012;23(3):360-363.Positive autoscopic phenomena - autoscopy, heautoscopy and out-of-body experience - may occur in a variety of diseases and also in physiological conditions. They are a rare but probably underreported phenomenon in focal epilepsies. Here, we investigate whether ictal lateralized autoscopic phenomena give lateralizing information about the underlying epileptic focus. We present the cases of seven patients from our center who experienced ictal lateralized autoscopic phenomena and analyzed their focus lateralization and localization of the underlying brain lesion. In addition, we reviewed seven cases published in German and English language literature. In the total group of 14 patients with ictal lateralized autoscopic phenomena, 12 (85.7%) of them had a well-defined epileptic focus contralateral to the side of the autoscopic appearance. Therefore, the data point to an association between ictal lateralized autoscopy and contralateral epileptic focus. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved