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The Clinical Diagnosis of Epilepsy: Is it All in the History?
Susannah Cornes, MDAssociate Professor of Clinical Neurology
University of California, San Francisco
Disclosures
Antiepileptic drugs: The more things change…
3Löscher et al Nat Rev Drug Disc (2013)Löscher and Schmidt Epilepsia (2011) Kwan and Brodie NEJM (2000), Brodie et al Neurology (2012)
Gowers (1881): 1 drug, 64% effective
Coatsworth (1971): 6 drugs, 62% effective
Kwan & Brodie (2000): 15 drugs, 63% effective
Brodie (2012): 26 drugs, 68% effective
Hauser et al. NEJM (1998)Fisher et al. Epilepsia (2014)Kwan and Brodie. NEJM (2000)
Making a clinical diagnosis of epilepsy
• Epilepsy is defined as one or more unprovoked seizures and >60% risk of recurrence.
• Risk of refractoriness varies by # seizures prior to treatment:– 51% (>20 seizures)– 29% (<20 seizures
• 5 year risk of additional unprovoked seizures:
5 year seizure risk a er first unprovoked seizure
1st seizure
2nd seizure (risk 33%) 3rd seizure (risk 73%) 4th seizure (risk 76%)
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“The smartest neurologist is the last neurologist to see the patient.”
-Bob Fishman
Is there a delay to diagnosis? Case 1:56yo RH M with history of episodes of a rising sensation from his stomach and a false presence presented to the ER w/ paresthesias, nausea and “weird neuro sx’s.” Diagnosed with gastroenteritis.
• “…hears a familiar but incomprehensible voice associated with a mental image of a vaguely familiar man…”
• Almost like a memory.• Entirely stereotyped.• EEG normal.R hippocampal FLAIR hyperintensity
resolves revealing asymmetric atrophy.
10/15
1/16
Case 2: 30yo RH M p/w first GTC 1/16 with R head turn.History of “dizzy spells…really hard to describe,” but like a head rush and increased with lack of sleep. Believed related to fatigue. No AEDs pending EEG and MRI.
• Minor injuries following second GTC 4/16.
• Further history reveals same feeling prior to both larger events.
• EEG normal.
Left Mesial Temporal Sclerosis
Case 3:45 yo RH M s/p AVM rupture 9/11 presented with first GTC 9/16 preceded by L visual change. History of episodes of “tuning into odd frequencies” or “digital sounds” and appearance of “steam rising” in L visual field every 1 – 3 months. Believed to be migraine.
Right temporal encephalomalacia. Right temporal slowing and breach.
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Hippocrates on Aura“[The people who] are habituated to their disease have a presentiment when an attack is imminent, and run away from men, home, if their house be near, if not, to the most deserted spot, where the fewest people will see the fall, and immediately hide their heads. This is the result of shame at their malady, and not, as the many hold, of fear of the divine.”
Hippocrate. De la maladie sacree, livre 6.
Galen on Aura“…visited a 13 year-old boy. The patient told them that the condition originated in the lower leg, and that ‘from here it climbed upwards in a straight line through the thigh and further through the flank and side to the neck and as far as the head; but as soon as it had touched the latter he was no longer able to follow’…like a coldbreeze.”
-Temkin. The Falling Sickness: A History of Epilepsy from the Greeks to the Beginning of Modern Neurology
How far we’ve come?Pitfalls of Epilepsy Self-Diagnosis Pitfalls of Epilepsy Self-Diagnosis
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How far we’ve come?
www.Epilepsy.com
I know exactly what you are going through. I have had the intense DejaVu feeling for 15 years and almost black out. Sometimes I hear music and sometimes I lose my memory after… I had told my doctor about this feeling and he just laughed, but it wasn't until I was rushed by ambulance to an emergency room that they suggested I go see a neurologist. Maybe you should do the same.I believe auras are also simple partial seizures, and what happens after is complex partial or beyond. But they are only called auras, if something happens after them like a grand mal or complex partial. With me, it seems my auras (which are generally depersonlization) might be a migraine variant function, but while having an EEG and having what I believed to be an aura at the time, it showed up as epileptic activity. So I don't know! hahaha.
So if everyone thinks the auras are seizures if I have these symptoms all the time does that mean I have the seizures all the time???
Re: Are auras actually seizures? Or are they just “warnings”? What is HEP?
• A multicenter prospective observational study of patients with newly treated focal epilepsy
• Goal: identify biomarkers of drug resistance, disease progression, and comorbidity development
• Methods– Electronic seizure diaries – Annual visits with blood and urine collection– Mood and cognitive assessments– MRI and EEG
• Currently 300 enrolled globally (30 at UCSF)
What is HEP?
• Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria– Age 12-60– High suspicion for focal epilepsy (not IGE)– At least 1 seizure in past 12 months– Must be on an AED, but for less than 4 months– No big or progressive lesions (e.g. severe TBI, tumors)– No major psychiatric or medical comorbidities (e.g. autism, substance abuse, HIV, CKD, etc)
• If you have a potential candidate, email: [email protected]
• Visit www.humanepilepsyproject.org for more info
Time to treatment and seizure count by initial seizure type
# of pts 1st seizure to tx (days) 2nd seizure to tx (days) Total seizures to tx
Seizure type
median mean range median mean range median mean range
1st & 2nd
SGTC.64 76 224 0–2803 4 100
-119–2346
2 6 1–133
1st SGTC &.
2nd non-SGTC.
17 510 768 8–3347 192 393 4–1685 7 61 2–571
CPS. 76 272 897 0–9340 233 817 -41–9309 17 128 1–5322
SPS. 74 450 1691 1–15798 399 1617 0–15798 27 215 2–5362
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47
5
3
7
217
1st & 2nd seizures SGTC
No delay
Delay
PU
DU
ED
UNK
66 1
1
3
11
Initial SGTC then non-GTC
No delay
Delay
PU
DU
PU/DU
UNK
17
2715
584
59
1st seizure CPS
No delay
Delay
PU
DU
ED
PU/DU
UNK
8
40
949
466
1st seizure SPS
No delay
Delay
PU
DU
ED
PU/DU
UNK
Reasons for delay to treatment Case 4: 29yo RH W with FH of epilepsy p/w intermittent “vivid flashbacks” with increasing frequency for which referred by PMD for epilepsy evaluation.Epilepsy diagnosed and AED recommended.Patient elected to obtain EEG and MRI results prior.
• MRI normal.• EEG normal.• At follow-up, began Lamotrigine and titrated
to XR 200mg nightly. • No additional auras….
Take home points• The delay to diagnosis varies according to the seizure type.• Patients and physicians have a hard time identifying the
symptoms of aura or SPS.• Delay may have broad consequences (morbidity, mortality,
refractoriness, risks of incorrect treatments, loss of work etc…)
• Be vigilant about seizure symptoms, including-– Typical aura symptoms (including nausea, deja vu) – Stereotyped symptoms in patient with first GTC or known lesion
• Educate our patients and colleagues to do the same.
Acknowledgements
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UCSF Epilepsy Center
Dan Lowenstein, MDPaul Garcia, MD
Robert Knowlton, MDHeidi Kirsch, MD
Tina Shih, MDSusannah Cornes, MDManu Hegde, MD, PhD
Maritza Lopez, RN
Edward Chang, MDMariann Ward, NP
UCSF Epilepsy Center
Dan Lowenstein, MDManu Hegde, MD, PhD
Stacey BalterRachel Hennessy
Jacqueline French, MDSheryl Haut, MDJohn Hixson, MD
Kamil Detyniecki, MD
HEP Investigators