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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Parasomnias are common clinical complaints. Formal sleep evaluation including PSG is indicated for parasomnias that are violent and potentially injurious; disruptive to the bed partner or other household members; accompanied by excessive daytime sleepiness; or associated with medical,psychiatric, or neurologic symptoms or findings [2]. Multiple sleep latency testing should be considered for patients who have complaints of excessive daytime sleepiness. An extensive history, including medical, neurologic,psychiatric, and sleep disorder, and a review of medication, alcohol, illicit drug use, and family history of parasomnias, may provide useful clues. Distinguishing between a parasomnia and a seizure may be difficult as both can present as recurrent, stereotypical behaviors. Evaluation may be aided by an expanded EEG montage during overnight PSG studies.
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PMID:Parasomnias and other sleep-related movement disorders. 1593 93

Sleep disorders often occur in patients with epilepsy. Every neurologist is familiar with the postictal drowsiness after tonicoclonic convulsions and likewise with the provocation of an attack after sleep deprivation that is often combined with alcohol consumption. It is more difficult to differentiate between motor disturbances and epileptic episodes during sleep. For example, nocturnal paroxysmal dystonia, which are frequently an expression of frontal lobe epilepsy, are long not recognized as non-epileptic, sleep-associated attacks. In addition, nocturnal episodes in context of a REM sleep behavioral disturbance can occasionally be differentiated from frontal lobe epileptic seizures only with great difficulty. A clear differential diagnostics between epileptic and non-epileptic attacks during sleep is, however, a requirement for a selective treatment.
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PMID:[Epilepsy and sleep disorders]. 1596 74

Improving quality of life is the most important goal for patients with epilepsy. To recognize the factors associated with quality of life in patients with epilepsy in Mexico, we performed a cross-sectional survey using the Quality of Life in Epilepsy 31 (QOLIE-31) inventory to assess the quality of life of 401 adult patients with epilepsy at the National Institute of Neurology and Neurosurgery of Mexico. Clinical and demographical data were collected. Multiple regression was used to determine which factors affected quality of life in our patients. The variables that most strongly predicted a lower QOLIE-31 total score after multiple regression were sleep disorders (P<0.001), socioeconomic status (P<0.001), female gender (P=0.002), and high seizure frequency (P=0.001). In our study, neither depression nor time of evolution of epilepsy had significant influence on QOLIE-31 scores.
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PMID:Sleep disturbances, socioeconomic status, and seizure control as main predictors of quality of life in epilepsy. 1609 15

Epilepsy is a chronic disorder that has been associated with other specific health problems. Evidence from recent clinical and basic investigations indicates that aspects of cerebral dysfunction associated with a lowered seizure threshold may also predispose toward other disorders such as depression, cognitive impairment, sleep disorders, and migraine. Similarly, certain types of brain injury may also increase the risk of adverse antiepileptic drug (AED) effects. For example, a history of febrile seizures is associated with a three fold increase in the occurrence of negative psychiatric effects of two newer AEDs. Poor fitness and obesity are also reported at higher rates in epilepsy. Some comorbid conditions in epilepsy, such a depression and anxiety, may have a greater influence on subjective health status than does seizure rate. Management strategies employed in the outpatient clinic to maximize overall health outcomes should include screening and treatment for the commonly coexistent conditions in persons with epilepsy.
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PMID:Epilepsy and common comorbidities: improving the outpatient epilepsy encounter. 1612 Apr 91

These practice parameters are an update of the previously-published recommendations regarding the indications for polysomnography and related procedures in the diagnosis of sleep disorders. Diagnostic categories include the following: sleep related breathing disorders, other respiratory disorders, narcolepsy, parasomnias, sleep related seizure disorders, restless legs syndrome, periodic limb movement sleep disorder, depression with insomnia, and circadian rhythm sleep disorders. Polysomnography is routinely indicated for the diagnosis of sleep related breathing disorders; for continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) titration in patients with sleep related breathing disorders; for the assessment of treatment results in some cases; with a multiple sleep latency test in the evaluation of suspected narcolepsy; in evaluating sleep related behaviors that are violent or otherwise potentially injurious to the patient or others; and in certain atypical or unusual parasomnias. Polysomnography may be indicated in patients with neuromuscular disorders and sleep related symptoms; to assist in the diagnosis of paroxysmal arousals or other sleep disruptions thought to be seizure related; in a presumed parasomnia or sleep related seizure disorder that does not respond to conventional therapy; or when there is a strong clinical suspicion of periodic limb movement sleep disorder. Polysomnography is not routinely indicated to diagnose chronic lung disease; in cases of typical, uncomplicated, and noninjurious parasomnias when the diagnosis is clearly delineated; for patients with seizures who have no specific complaints consistent with a sleep disorder; to diagnose or treat restless legs syndrome; for the diagnosis of circadian rhythm sleep disorders; or to establish a diagnosis of depression.
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PMID:Practice parameters for the indications for polysomnography and related procedures: an update for 2005. 1617 Dec 94

This article examines the relationship between sleep and epilepsy, an association that has been recognized since antiquity. The mechanisms whereby sleep facilitates seizures are under investigation, although the synchronizing role of thalamocortic networks seems contributory. Recognition of the variety of generalized and partial epileptic syndromes associated with sleep, familiarity with the differential diagnosis of nocturnal spells, and awareness of the role that antiepileptic drugs and sleep disorders may play in epilepsy are helpful in evaluating patients presenting with behavioral and motor disturbances of sleep.
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PMID:Sleep and epilepsy. 1624 19

Sleep-related paroxysmal disorders in infancy and childhood have recently been reviewed and classified by the American Sleep Disorders Association. Although in some patients diagnosis is easy to achieve, at times a video/EEG recording of the episodes is required because of the similarity to epileptic seizures. These disorders often represent a challenge for paediatricians as an accurate diagnosis is required. We report a review of the literature and a characterisation of our series of patients. Paroxysmal events during sleep are frequently misdiagnosed as psychogenic fits, epileptic seizures or physiologic events with evident disadvantages for children and families. The widespread use of neurophysiological techniques and better knowledge of the semeiology of epileptic seizures have led us to correctly define these events, which have sometimes been erroneously treated in the past.
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PMID:Non-epileptic paroxysmal manifestations during sleep in infancy and childhood. 1633 97

Clinical trial endpoints often extend beyond conventional efficacy and tolerability measures. While it is generally assumed that seizure control without major adverse drug effects is by far the most important determinant of quality of life, other factors also are important. Pharmacokinetic endpoints could also provide relevant information for optimal drug use. Outcome measures could reveal drug effects on mood, headache, and sleep disorders, as well as overall quality of life and seizure severity.
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PMID:Active control trials: endpoints beyond conventional efficacy and tolerability measures. 1637 52

The aim of the study was to assess sleep-wake habits and disorders and excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) in an unselected outpatient epilepsy population. Sleep-wake habits and presence of sleep disorders were assessed by means of a clinical interview and a standard questionnaire in 100 consecutive patients with epilepsy and 90 controls. The questionnaire includes three validated instruments: the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) for EDS, SA-SDQ for sleep apnea (SA), and the Ullanlinna Narcolepsy Scale (UNS) for narcolepsy. Sleep complaints were reported by 30% of epilepsy patients compared to 10% of controls (p=0.001). The average total sleep time was similar in both groups. Insufficient sleep times were suspected in 24% of patients and 33% of controls. Sleep maintenance insomnia was more frequent in epilepsy patients (52% vs. 38%, p=0.06), whereas nightmares (6% vs. 16%, p=0.04) and bruxism (10% vs. 19%, p=0.07) were more frequent in controls. Sleep onset insomnia (34% vs. 28%), EDS (ESS >or=10, 19% vs. 14%), SA (9% vs. 3%), restless legs symptoms (RL-symptoms, 18% vs. 12%) and most parasomnias were similarly frequent in both groups. In a stepwise logistic regression model loud snoring and RL-symptoms were found to be the only independent predictors of EDS in epilepsy patients. In conclusion, sleep-wake habits and the frequency of most sleep disorders are similar in non-selected epilepsy patients as compared to controls. In epilepsy patients, EDS was predicted by a history of loud snoring and RL-symptoms but not by SA or epilepsy-related variables (including type of epilepsy, frequency of seizures, and number of antiepileptic drugs).
Seizure 2006 Jul
PMID:Sleep-wake habits and disorders in a series of 100 adult epilepsy patients--a prospective study. 1654 7

The aim of this controlled historical cohort study was to assess the validity of post-concussion syndrome in children. We identified 301 children aged 4-15 years who had sustained an isolated brain concussion, and another group of 301 children who sustained any other mild body injury excluding the head. Parents from both groups filled in standardized questionnaires containing questions about the health condition of the children: headache, neck pain, dizziness, malaise, fatigability, exercise or noise intolerance, irritability, weepiness, sadness, anxiety, nocturnal enuresis, tics, sleep disorders, memory or learning difficulties, hyperactivity, seizures, attention disorder, buzzing in the ears, subjective parental concerns about the child's health condition, and parental concerns about their child having a brain disorder. The severity of the complaints was rated on the Visual Analogue Scale. After the final exclusion, 102 pairs strictly matched by sex, age, and the date of trauma were analyzed. The differences of parental complaints about the health condition of their children between case and control groups were statistically insignificant for all symptoms, except parental concerns about their child having brain damage which were significantly higher in the case group. The likelihood of parental concerns about the possibility of their child having brain damage was 2.7 times higher in the case group. Headache, learning difficulties, and sleep disorders were significant variables predicting the concerns. These results question the validity of the post-concussion syndrome in children.
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PMID:The validity of post-concussion syndrome in children: a controlled historical cohort study. 1668 58


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