Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is epilepsy?
* Epileptic seizures are a transient event experienced due to excessive and synchronous discharge of cerebral neurones.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the two major categories of epileptic seizures?
* Partial (Focal)
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the two types of partial seizure?
* Simples - No loss of awareness.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the three types of generalized seizure?
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is a cryptogenic seizure?
• A seizure whose characteristics would suggest underlying cause, but which has not yet been identified.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the differentials for epilepsy?
1) Syncope
2) Non-epileptic attacks
3) Panic attacks
4) Sleep disorders
5) Migraine
6) Transient ischaemic attacks
7) Hypoglycaemia
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is the typical prodrome of syncope?
Nausea, clammy, blurring or loss of vision, deafness, tinnitus.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the red flags for cardiogenic syncope?
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is NEAD?
• Non-epileptic attack disorder.
- Psychologically mediated episodes of altered awareness.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: If, during a seizure, someone developed irregular and asynchronous jerks what would the likely diagnosis be?
• Non-epileptic attack
-NEAD
Week 232 - Epilepsy: Tongue biting and incontinence is common in which of the following, seizure, syncope of NEAD?
Epileptic seizure.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is the gold standard for investigation of seizures? Why is it not commonly used?
* Expensive and time consuming.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the causes of epilepsy in infants?
• Developmental malformations, perinatal injuries and infections.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the causes of epilepsy in children/adolescents?
Idiopathic generalised epilepsy.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the causes of epilepsy in Young adults?
IGEs (Idiopathic), Head injury, alcohol, vascular malformations, hippocampal sclerosis.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the leading causes of epilepsy in 30-50 yr olds?
Brain tumours
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the leading causes of epilepsy in the over 50s?
Cerebrovascular disease.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the characteristics of Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy?
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is heterotopic grey matter?
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is neurocycticercosis?
• Probably the most common cause of epilepsy world wide.
- Eggs of the pork tape worm migrate to the brain where they form cysts.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is the first line treatment of idiopathic generalised epilepsy?
• Sodium valporate
- In females - Lamotrigine or levetiracetam (Since sodium valporate has a high risk of birth defects.)
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What is the first line treatment for focal/partial epilepsy?
Carbamazepine/lamotrigine/levetiracetam
Week 232 - Epilepsy: What are the common side-effects of all anti-epilepsy drugs?
Tiredness, fatigue, dizziness.
Week 232 - Epilepsy: Which anti-epilepsy drug has side effects including rash, ataxia and double vision?
Carbamazepine