What is epilepsy?
a chronic disease characterized for recurrent seizures
What is a seizure?
A short term episode of abnormal firing of the cerebral neurons
- seizures are classified as partial or generalized
What are some common causes of seizures?
fever, head injury, heredity, alcohol withdrawal, metabolic disorder
What is a partial (focal) seizure?
initiated by neurons in a localized area of one cerebral hemisphere
What is a generalized seizure?
simultaneous activation of both cerebral hemispheres
What is the motor homunculus?
Partial Seizure
initiated by neurons in a localized area of one cerebral hemisphere
What do electroencephalograph readings tell us about seizures?
Complex partial seizure
initiated in neurons in a localized area of one of the cerebral hemispheres, but spreads very easily
- seizures spread and EEG similar to simple partial seizure
Partial Seizure with Secondary Generalization
Generalized tonic-clonic seizure
simultaneous activation of both the cerebral hemispheres
- point of origin is in the thalamus - many of these seizures have a genetic origin
What is considered status epilepticus?
When a seizure lasts for longer than 5-10 minutes
- this is considered a medical emergency
What does an EEG show during a generalized tonic-clonic seizure?
What is an absence seizure?
no motor involvement in the upper and lower body- only a twitching of the eyes sometimes
- often goes undiagnosed and is mistaken for the child “packing out”
What does an EEG show in an absence seizure?
shows abnormal slow wave electrical activity in all brain regions
What are the different MOAs for seizure medications?
Using a dependent block of sodium channels decreases what?
neuronal firing rate
Decreasing ____ and increasing ____ can lead to a decrease in seizure activity?
2. GABA
Neurons in the thalamus are dependant on what for depolarization?
- blocking these channels slows the pacemaker
What drugs can be used to treat a partial (focal) seizure?
What drugs can be used to treat a tonic-clonic seizure?
carb., phenytoin pr valproate
What drug can be used to treat a generalized absence seizure?
ethosuximide
What drugs can be used to treat a generalized tonic-clonic or absence seizure?
valproate
What drugs can be used to treat an atypical generalized seizure?
valproate