Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0149958 (complex partial seizures)
2,563 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The contingent negative variation (CNV) is a long-latency event-related potential elicited by paired or associated stimuli. We recorded contingent negative variation in 50 patients with complex partial and secondarily generalized seizures and in 20 neurologically and psychiatrically normal unmedicated controls. CNV was recorded from Fz, Cz, and Pz. A 2000 Hz tone was followed after 1.5 s by 1000 microseconds light flash, at which a button press was to be executed. Filter band pass was 0.1-20 Hz, analysis time was 10 s and 10 responses were replicated. Patients with complex partial seizures with and without secondary generalization had lower measurements of area under the CNV curve (AUC) than did controls, and CNV amplitude was significantly reduced. Patients with interictal behavioural symptoms had significantly smaller AUC and lower amplitude. No significant difference was found between depressed and non-depressed seizure patients with respect to AUC, but amplitude was significantly lower in depressed patients. Seizure patients with psychosis had significantly lower AUC but did not differ from non-psychotic patients in CNV amplitude. No differences were found between seizure patients with and without personality disorder with respect to CNV AUC or amplitude. Post-imperative negative variation was significantly more common in seizure patients than in controls and among patients with epilepsy, was significantly increased in those with inter-ictal behaviour disturbance generally and psychosis particularly. No specific effect of anticonvulsant monotherapy on AUC or amplitude was identified. These findings suggest that CNV may differ between partial epilepsy patients and controls, and that inter-ictal behaviour disturbance may particularly affect CNV measures. They also agree with previous evidence for a frontal lobe generator for the CNV, and a possible role for central dopaminergic pathways in the production of PINV.
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PMID:Contingent negative variation in epilepsy. 930 21

A case report of a 61 year-old male with a long history of complex partial seizures is presented. Multiple psychotic symptomatology developed post-operatively. It is argued that these reflect continuing right temporal epileptogenic activity.
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PMID:Psychosis de novo following temporal lobectomy. 966 6

Data about psychiatric disorders associated with epilepsy as well as their risk factors are heterogeneous. The overall prevalence of psychiatric disturbances in epileptic patients can be estimated between 20 and 30 per cent. It is the highest in pharmocoresistant cases seen in specialized centers. Psychotic disorders, depression, and suicide are the three most common among interictal disturbances. Psychoses affect 2 to 9 per cent of patients and are more frequent in cases with aura or altered consciousness, such as in complex partial seizures and absences. They correlate positively with the multiplicity of seizures but often inversely with their frequency. Temporal lobe epilepsy is associated with schizo phrenic-like and paranoid types of psychosis, but frontal lobe epilepsy is also common. A putative association with predominant left or bilateral EEG abnormalities in cases with partial epilepsy remains to be confirmed, as well as the frequency of underlying structural lesions. Depressive disorders affect 20 to 60 per cent of patients. While their occurrence with partial complex seizures and left hemisphere foci is common, the role of temporal lobe involvement still appears controversial. Depression prevails in cases with seizures that occasionally, albeit rarely, secondarily generalize and correlates with the duration of the disease, intractable seizures, and polypharmacy. A genetic factor is likely to play a role. Suicides rates are increased, encountered in 0.2-0.5 per cent of patients and causing deaths in 3-7 per cent of them. The overall risk might be the highest during the first years after diagnosis of epilepsy, as well as in patients with temporal lobe foci, depression, or psychosis. Great variability and discordance in results show the major difficulties encountered in epidemiologic studies. Most of these problems relate to the classification of epileptic disorders as well as that of psychiatric disorders, the variability in the methods and measures which are used, and frequent bias in the selection of patients. We review here data about the frequency of major psychiatric disorders in epileptic patients or the frequency of epileptic disorders in psychiatric patients, and also possible risk factors related to the epileptic disease and its evolution.
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PMID:[Epilepsy and psychiatric disorders: epidemiological data]. 977 58

Edgar Allan Poe, one of the most celebrated of American storytellers, lived through and wrote descriptions of episodic unconsciousness, confusion, and paranoia. These symptoms have been attributed to alcohol or drug abuse but also could represent complex partial seizures, prolonged postictal states, or postictal psychosis. Complex partial seizures were not well described in Poe's time, which could explain a misdiagnosis. Alternatively, he may have suffered from complex partial epilepsy that was complicated or caused by substance abuse. Even today, persons who have epilepsy are mistaken for substance abusers and occasionally are arrested during postictal confusional states. Poe was able to use creative genius and experiences from illness to create memorable tales and poignant poems.
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PMID:Seizures in the life and works of Edgar Allan Poe. 1036 17

A history of depression or depressive symptomatology has been reported in up to two-thirds of patients with medically intractable epilepsy, whereas community studies have demonstrated affective disorder only in a quarter of these patients. Depression has been reported peri- and interictally. However, differentiation may be difficult in patients with frequent seizures. Most authors have found no correlation between depression and epilepsy variables. However, complex partial seizures, especially of temporal lobe origin, appear to be etiologic factors, particularly in men with left-sided foci. Depression is also more common in patients treated with polytherapy especially with barbiturates, phenytoin, and vigabatrin. Depression has also been described de novo after temporal lobectomy. Psychosocial factors also play a part, but underlying risk factors (e.g., genetic, endocrine and metabolic) may explain the increased rates of depression in people with epilepsy compared to those with other neurologic and chronic medical conditions. The depression appears to be endogenous. Patients tend to exhibit fewer neurotic traits and more psychotic symptoms such as paranoia, delusions, and persecutory auditory hallucinations. Treatment approaches include psychotherapy, rationalization of antiepileptic drug medication, antidepressant treatment, and ECT. The tricyclic and related antidepressants appear to be epileptogenic, especially in people at high risk (personal or family history of seizures, abnormal pretreatment EEG, brain damage, alcohol or substance abuse/withdrawal and concurrent use of CNS-active medication). Seizures tend to occur early in treatment or after dose increments, especially if rapidly titrated. There is little evidence that the newer antidepressants, e.g., selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, moclobemide, venlafaxine, or nefazodone are more epileptogenic than placebo.
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PMID:Depression in epilepsy: etiology, phenomenology, and treatment. 1060 3

The purpose of this paper is to understand the association between antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), patient characteristics, changes in seizure pattern and emergent psychiatric disorder, i.e. psychosis or affective disorder. To this end we carried out a retrospective casenote study on 89 patients who developed psychiatric symptoms during treatment with topiramate, vigabatrin or tiagabine. The psychiatric problem was either an affective or a psychotic disorder (not including affective psychoses). It was discovered that 99% of the patients suffered from complex partial seizures with or without secondary generalization. More than half were on polytherapy with two or more other AEDs. Nearly two-thirds had a previous psychiatric history. There was a strong association between the type of previous psychiatric illness and the type of emerging psychiatric problem, both for psychoses and for affective disorders. Patients on vigabatrin had an earlier onset of epilepsy and more neurological abnormalities than those on topiramate. Those patients on lower doses had a shorter interval between the start of the AED therapy and the onset of the psychiatric problem. A seizure-free period was observed in more than half of the patients before they developed the psychiatric symptoms, and of these more were likely to develop a psychosis rather than an affective disorder. There seemed to be an association of suppression of right-sided seizures and the onset of the psychiatric problem. The conclusions drawn were that patients with a previous history of psychosis or affective disorder tended to develop the same psychiatric problem with new AEDs. Those with a seizure-free period before the onset of the psychiatric problem were more likely to develop a psychosis than an affective disorder.
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PMID:Psychiatric symptoms after therapy with new antiepileptic drugs: psychopathological and seizure related variables. 1088 Feb 83

Vigabatrin (VGB) is a new antiepileptic drug useful in refractOry partial seizures. Psychosis as a secondary effect of VGB is well known. This drug may even induce new epileptic seizures. We report a 69-year-old hypertensive patient with multiple cerebral infarcts. She was diagnosed as having late onset symptomatic partial epilepsy (complex partial seizures and generalized secondary motor partial seizures). She had been receiving VGB 3 g/day in monotherapy. She came to the emergency room in a psychotic state with new epileptic seizures. We performed an EEG and video during the ictal phase. The patient was awake, conscious and partially oriented. The video showed generalized myoclonic jerks involving facial and limb muscles, separated by non-convulsive intervals lasting three minutes. The EEG showed spike and wave discharges over a diffuse slow-wave background activity. The patient was conscious throughout the recording. The electroclinical picture was considered as an encephalopathy-associated generalized myoclonic status. VGB was replaced by phenytoin. Two weeks later, and after a clinical improvement, a new recording showed the disappearance of signs of encephalopathy and the myoclonic status. Epileptic seizures induced by VGB are well reported. Several pathogenic mechanisms have been suggested. In our case the myoclonic status was related to a non-dose dependent encephalopathy induced by VGB. The electroclinical improvement after withdrawal of the drug supports this possibility.
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PMID:[Acute encephalopathy and myoclonic status induced by vigabatrin monotherapy] . 1114 6

We sought to examine interictal psychoses based on the international epilepsy classification and DSM IV criteria, with special attention paid to epilepsy types as well as to subcategories of psychoses. One hundred thirty-two outpatients were studied, each with definite evidence of both epilepsy and interictal psychosis clearly demarcated from postictal psychosis. We compared them with 2,773 other epilepsy outpatients as a control. Risk factors for psychosis were examined within the temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) group and the more extended group of symptomatic localization-related epilepsy. Further, nuclear schizophrenia and other nonschizophrenic psychotic disorders were compared. We confirmed a close correlation between TLE and interictal psychoses. Within the TLE group, only early epilepsy onset and a history of prolonged febrile convulsions were revealed to be significantly associated with interictal psychosis. Within the symptomatic localization-related epilepsy group, such parameters as complex partial seizures, autonomic aura, and temporal EEG foci were closely associated with psychoses. There was also a significant difference between groups as to ictal fear and secondary generalization. Whereas patients with early psychosis onset and a low intelligence quotient were overrepresented in the nuclear schizophrenia group, drug-induced psychosis and alternative psychosis were underrepresented. TLE proved to be preferentially associated with interictal psychoses. Within the TLE group, medial TLE in particular was found to be more closely associated with psychosis. Our data support the original postulation of Landolt, stating that alternative or drug-induced psychoses constitute a definite subgroup of interictal psychoses, which are different from chronic epileptic psychoses that simulate schizophrenia.
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PMID:Reexamination of interictal psychoses based on DSM IV psychosis classification and international epilepsy classification. 1120 92

The relationship between epilepsy and behavioral disturbances has been a subject of controversy since the 19th century. Affective changes may occur prior, during, or after the ictal discharge. Depression is the most prevalent comorbidity. Anxiety, panic attacks, and pseudoseizures may resemble complex partial seizures, and their diagnosis and treatment may be confusing, even to experienced clinicians. Epilepsy-related psychosis is less common, manifesting occasionally with symptoms that are indistinguishable from schizophrenia. There is no clear evidence of a distinct "epileptoid" personality, and interictal violence is extremely rare. Pharmacologic treatment with anticonvulsants remains the cornerstone of treatment. In case of psychiatric comorbidities or refractory seizures, the diagnosis should be re-examined.
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PMID:The relationship of psychiatric illnesses and seizures. 1135 88

A previously healthy 15-year-old boy initially diagnosed to have acute psychotic reaction had a history of a single generalized seizure and prolonged amnestic states of varying intensity and duration. An ictal electroencephalogram (EEG) showed bitemporal ictal discharges starting from the left side. Carbamazepine was started. A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) obtained on the 10th day of the antiepileptic therapy showed increased signal intensity on the T2 weighted images. The patient's memory function markedly improved during 10 months' follow-up with antiepileptic treatment, although he described brief attacks of dizziness. A repeat MRI examination showed normal findings. The amnesticstates were thought to be due to frequent complex partial seizures, and transient MRI changes to hippocampal edema. This case illustrates the importance of epileptic disorders in the differential diagnosis of psychiatric conditions.
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PMID:Complex partial seizure mimicking psychotic reaction in an adolescent. 1159 19


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