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1.
Epilepsy Behav Rep ; 18: 100517, 2022.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35243288

We report a survey of neurology residency program directors (PDs) and recent neurology residency graduates about the education provided during residency on functional seizures (FS), a subtype of functional neurological disorder (FND). The purpose of our study was to assess the education gap for neurology residents about FS since patients with FS are frequently seen by neurologists, who typically conduct the evaluation and share the findings with the patient. A survey was sent to 93 Neurology residency program directors and 71 recent graduates. We obtained a low response rate of 17%. Results of the survey revealed that the most frequent settings for education on FS were within a clinical rotation in the Epilepsy Monitoring Unit (68.8% of PDs and 88.7% of recent graduate respondents) and via a single didactic lecture (81.3% of PDs and 80.3% of recent graduate respondents). The majority of programs did not provide a curriculum for training and feedback on best practices in communicating the diagnosis or on evidence-based treatments. Eighteen percent of neurology residents reported not learning how to communicate the diagnosis of FS to patients, while 77% responded that they were not taught about treatment. These results illustrate a curriculum gap in what neurology residents are taught about diagnosis and management of FS (and FND). We propose a standardized model that can be adapted in residencies.

2.
Acta Neurol Scand ; 135(1): 142-144, 2017 Jan.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26968442

BACKGROUND: Epilepsy and breast cancer are both prevalent conditions. A subset of women with medically refractory epilepsy and vagus nerve stimulators (VNS) may later develop breast cancer and may require adjuvant radiation as part of their treatment regimen. However, to date, little data are available on the effects of radiation on VNS function. CASE PRESENTATION: We present a young woman with tuberous sclerosis, developmental delay, and medically refractory epilepsy who developed left-sided breast cancer. Her epilepsy became controlled with a recent addition of a VNS implanted in her left chest wall. She required adjuvant radiation therapy to her left breast, and this raised the novel question of the safety of radiation on the integrity and functioning of the device, which we explore in this article. CONCLUSION: This case is the first report of a patient with VNS for epilepsy and breast cancer who received radiation therapy proximal to the device. The device continued to function properly despite the exposure.


Breast Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Epilepsy/therapy , Implantable Neurostimulators , Radiotherapy/adverse effects , Vagus Nerve Stimulation , Adult , Breast Neoplasms/complications , Epilepsy/complications , Female , Humans
3.
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol ; 34(3): 558-63, 2013 Mar.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22878013

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Determination of hemispheric language dominance is critical for planning epilepsy surgery. We assess the usefulness of spatiotemporal source analysis of magnetoencephalography for determining language laterality. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Thirty-five patients with epilepsy were studied. The patients performed a semantic word-processing task during MEG recording. Epochs containing language-related neuromagnetic activity were averaged after preprocessing. The averaged data between 250 and 550 ms after stimulus were analyzed by using dynamic statistical parametric mapping. ROIs were obtained in the opercular and triangular parts of the inferior frontal gyrus, superior temporal gyrus, and supramarginal gyrus in both hemispheres. We calculated laterality indices according to 1) dSPM-amplitude method, based on the amplitude of activation in the ROIs, and 2) dSPM-counting method, based on the number of unit dipoles with activation over a threshold in the ROIs. The threshold was determined as half of the maximum value in all ROIs for each patient. A LI ≥0.10 or ≤-0.10 was considered left- or right-hemisphere dominance, respectively; a LI between -0.10 and 0.10 was considered bilateral. All patients underwent an intracarotid amobarbital procedure as part of presurgical evaluation. RESULTS: The dSPM-counting method demonstrated laterality consistent with the IAP in 32 of 35 patients (91.4%), the remaining 3 (8.6%) demonstrated bilateral language representation, whereas the dSPM-amplitude method showed 18 (51.4%) concordant and 17 (48.6%) bilateral. No laterality opposite to the IAP was found. CONCLUSIONS: Spatiotemporal mapping of language lateralization with the dSPM-counting method may reduce the necessity for an IAP in as many as 90% of patients.


Brain Mapping/methods , Cerebral Cortex/physiopathology , Epilepsy/physiopathology , Functional Laterality , Language , Magnetoencephalography/methods , Nerve Net/physiopathology , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Spatio-Temporal Analysis , Young Adult
4.
Neurology ; 78(24): 1959-66, 2012 Jun 12.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22649214

OBJECTIVE: To assess progesterone treatment of intractable seizures in women with partial epilepsy. METHODS: This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase III, multicenter, clinical trial compared the efficacy and safety of adjunctive cyclic natural progesterone therapy vs placebo treatment of intractable seizures in 294 subjects randomized 2:1 to progesterone or placebo, stratified by catamenial and noncatamenial status. It compared treatments on proportions of ≥50% responders and changes in seizure frequency from 3 baseline to 3 treated menstrual cycles. RESULTS: There was no significant difference in proportions of responders between progesterone and placebo in the catamenial and noncatamenial strata. Prespecified secondary analysis showed that the level of perimenstrual seizure exacerbation (C1 level) was a significant predictor of responders for progesterone but not placebo. With increasing C1 levels, responders increased from 21% to 57% with progesterone vs 19% to 20% with placebo. Reductions in seizure frequency correlated with increasing C1 levels for progesterone but not placebo, progressing from 26% to 71% for progesterone vs 25% to 26% for placebo. A prespecified clinically important separation between progesterone and placebo responders (37.8% vs 11.1%; p = 0.037) was realized among 21.4% of women who had C1 level ≥3. CONCLUSION: There was no difference in the primary outcome of ≥50% responder rates between progesterone vs placebo for catamenial or noncatamenial groups. Post hoc findings suggest that the level of perimenstrual seizure exacerbation is a significant predictor of responder rate with progesterone and that progesterone may provide clinically important benefit for a subset of women with perimenstrually exacerbated seizures. CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE: This study provides Class III evidence that cyclic progesterone is ineffective in women with intractable partial epilepsy. Post hoc analysis identified a subset of women with higher levels of perimenstrual seizure exacerbation that were responsive to treatment.


Anticonvulsants/therapeutic use , Epilepsy/drug therapy , Menstrual Cycle , Progesterone/therapeutic use , Adolescent , Adult , Double-Blind Method , Female , Humans , Middle Aged , Treatment Outcome
6.
Neurology ; 72(10): 911-4, 2009 Mar 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19273825

OBJECTIVE: To determine whether 1) combined oral contraceptive (COC) use affects serum levels of valproate (VPA) as well as lamotrigine (LTG) and 2) the naturally occurring high (mid-luteal) and low (early-mid follicular) reproductive steroid level phases of the menstrual cycle might affect antiepileptic drug levels as well. METHODS: This investigation compared serum antiepileptic drug levels at two timepoints during a single menstrual cycle in four groups of women with epilepsy: 12 on VPA, 12 on VPA plus COC (VPA-COC), 12 on LTG, and 12 on LTG plus COC (LTG-COC). RESULTS: Both VPA and LTG levels were lower (p < 0.01) on active COC than on inactive pill with median declines of 23.4% for the VPA-COC group and 32.6% for the LTG-COC group. Serum LTG levels showed a notable but not significant 31.3% median decline during the mid-luteal phase compared to the early-mid follicular phase in the non-COC group. The non-COC valproate group showed the least change of any group between the two measured timepoints with a decline of 8.3% (p = NS). CONCLUSIONS: The findings suggest that valproate (VPA), like lamotrigine (LTG), has substantially and significantly lower serum levels while women take active combined oral contraceptives as compared to inactive pills. Larger sample sizes will be required to determine whether LTG levels may drop significantly also during the luteal (high steroid) phase of natural menstrual cycles and whether VPA levels may show greater stability in levels across the phases of the menstrual cycle.


Anticonvulsants/pharmacokinetics , Contraceptives, Oral, Combined/adverse effects , Menstrual Cycle/metabolism , Triazines/pharmacokinetics , Valproic Acid/pharmacokinetics , Adolescent , Adult , Body Mass Index , Drug Interactions , Epilepsy/drug therapy , Epilepsy/psychology , Female , Follicular Phase/metabolism , Humans , Lamotrigine , Luteal Phase/metabolism , Middle Aged , Young Adult
7.
Epilepsy Res ; 69(1): 80-6, 2006 Apr.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16516443

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the sensitivity of a simultaneous whole-head 306-channel magnetoencephalography (MEG)/70-electrode EEG recording to detect interictal epileptiform activity (IED) in a prospective, consecutive cohort of patients with medically refractory epilepsy that were considered candidates for epilepsy surgery. METHODS: Seventy patients were prospectively evaluated by simultaneously recorded MEG/EEG. All patients were surgical candidates or were considered for invasive EEG monitoring and had undergone an extensive presurgical evaluation at a tertiary epilepsy center. MEG and EEG raw traces were analysed individually by two independent reviewers. RESULTS: MEG data could not be evaluated due to excessive magnetic artefacts in three patients (4%). In the remaining 67 patients, the overall sensitivity to detect IED was 72% (48/67 patients) for MEG and 61% for EEG (41/67 patients) analysing the raw data. In 13% (9/67 patients), MEG-only IED were recorded, whereas in 3% (2/67 patients) EEG-only IED were recorded. The combined sensitivity was 75% (50/67 patients). CONCLUSION: Three hundred and six-channel MEG has a similarly high sensitivity to record IED as EEG and appears to be complementary. In one-third of the EEG-negative patients, MEG can be expected to record IED, especially in the case of lateral neocortical epilepsy and/or cortical dysplasia.


Electroencephalography , Epilepsies, Partial/pathology , Magnetoencephalography , Preoperative Care , Adolescent , Adult , Child , Epilepsies, Partial/physiopathology , Epilepsies, Partial/surgery , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity
8.
Neurology ; 65(7): 1016-20, 2005 Oct 11.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16217052

OBJECTIVE: To compare sexual function and reproductive hormone levels among men with epilepsy who took various antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), untreated men with epilepsy, and normal controls. METHODS: Subjects were 85 men with localization-related epilepsy (25 on carbamazepine [CBZ], 25 on phenytoin [PHT], 25 on lamotrigine [LTG], and 10 untreated for at least 6 months [no AED]) and 25 controls. Sexual function scores (S-scores), hormone levels (bioactive testosterone, estradiol), hormone ratios (bioactive testosterone/bioactive estradiol), and gonadal efficiency (bioactive testosterone/luteinizing hormone) were compared among the five groups. RESULTS: S-scores, bioactive testosterone levels, bioactive testosterone/bioactive estradiol, and bioactive testosterone/luteinizing hormone were significantly greater in the control and LTG groups than in the CBZ and PHT groups. Sex hormone binding globulin was significantly higher in the CBZ and PHT groups than in all other groups. S-scores were below the control range in 20% of the men with epilepsy, including 32.0% on CBZ, 24% on PHT, 20% on no AEDs, and 4% on LTG (chi2: p = 0.08 for all four groups; chi2: p = 0.02 for the three AED groups). Bioactive testosterone was below the control range in 28.2%, including 48% on CBZ, 28% on PHT, 20% on no AEDs, and 12% on LTG (chi2: p = 0.02). Among men with epilepsy who had low S-scores, 70.6% had bioactive testosterone levels below the control range as compared to 17.6% among men with normal S-scores (chi2: p < 0.0001). Among men with epilepsy who had abnormally low bioactive testosterone, 50.0% had low S-scores; among men with normal bioactive testosterone, 8.2% had low S-scores (chi2: p < 0.0001). Bioactive testosterone decline with age was significantly greater among men with epilepsy than among controls and notably greater in the CBZ and PHT groups than in the LTG and untreated groups. CONCLUSIONS: Sexual function, bioavailable testosterone levels, and gonadal efficiency in men with epilepsy who took lamotrigine were comparable to control and untreated values and significantly greater than with carbamazepine or phenytoin treatment.


Anticonvulsants/adverse effects , Gonadal Steroid Hormones/blood , Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin/drug effects , Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/blood , Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/chemically induced , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aging/physiology , Carbamazepine/adverse effects , Cross-Sectional Studies , Down-Regulation/drug effects , Down-Regulation/physiology , Epilepsy/complications , Epilepsy/drug therapy , Epilepsy/physiopathology , Estradiol/blood , Humans , Lamotrigine , Luteinizing Hormone/blood , Male , Middle Aged , Phenytoin/adverse effects , Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin/metabolism , Sexual Dysfunction, Physiological/physiopathology , Testosterone/blood , Triazines/adverse effects
9.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry ; 76(6): 885-7, 2005 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15897520

Ictal bradycardia is rare and its localising value is debated. Bradyarrhythmias are, however, important because of their potential connection to sudden death and ability to affect clinical seizure manifestations. Cerebral hypoperfusion induces loss of consciousness, at times with myoclonic jerks, whose clinical differentiation from a generalised convulsive seizure may prove difficult. Two invasive and five surface monitored seizures recorded over two years in a 51 year old woman with post-traumatic epilepsy characterised by seizure-triggered asystole were analysed. All seven seizures showed left temporal onset. Both intracranially recorded events started in the left anterior hippocampus/amygdala, spreading to the contralateral hippocampus in 35 and 25 seconds. Within 10 seconds an electrocardiogram showed asystole lasting 21 and 28 seconds, associated with suppression of recorded cerebral electrical activity, except a polyspike suppression pattern remaining in the hippocampi. Clinically, the patient, concomitantly with the cerebral suppression, developed myoclonic twitches of the limbs. A dual chamber cardiac pacemaker was implanted; at 11 months follow up, the patient has experienced only infrequent partial seizures, with none involving falls or shaking. Left temporal lobe seizures produced convulsive syncope initiated by ictal asystole. These observations suggest that intertemporal spread is necessary, though not sufficient, to produce bradycardia and asystole. Furthermore, pacemakers may decrease seizure severity, as well as potentially protect against malignant bradyarrhythmias.


Epilepsy, Generalized/diagnosis , Heart Arrest/diagnosis , Syncope/diagnosis , Amygdala/blood supply , Amygdala/surgery , Brain Injuries/complications , Diagnosis, Differential , Electrodes, Implanted , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Heart Arrest/etiology , Hippocampus/blood supply , Hippocampus/surgery , Humans , Middle Aged , Pacemaker, Artificial , Syncope/etiology , Syncope/surgery
10.
Semin Speech Lang ; 22(2): 95-105, 2001.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11373070

Remembering is an intrinsic and awesome aspect of human function. Memory loss, a common sequela of brain damage, has been studied extensively to understand how the brain encodes, stores and retrieves information. Important anatomic structures for memory have been identified from work in surgical therapy for epilepsy as well as other clinical syndromes where memory loss is a major feature. Beyond clinicoanatomic correlations, current research has focused on synaptic modifications and biochemical processes that underlie changes in neuronal connectivity. As Alzheimer's disease research expands our knowledge of memory, the treatment of other memory disorders will follow.


Brain/anatomy & histology , Brain/physiology , Memory/physiology , Brain/physiopathology , Humans , Memory Disorders/etiology , Memory Disorders/physiopathology , Neurotransmitter Agents/chemistry , Neurotransmitter Agents/physiology
11.
Epilepsia ; 41(2): 170-6, 2000 Feb.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10691113

PURPOSE: To assess the health status of patients after a single seizure. METHODS: We compared single-seizure patients (SS) with patients who had well-controlled epilepsy (WC), and uncomplicated hypertension (HT). Patients were adults screened from emergency and outpatient units of two urban teaching hospitals using predefined criteria. The 83 patients (SS, 30; WC, 29; HT, 24) were interviewed by phone about functional status (SF-36), comorbid illness, cause of illness, number of visits to health providers, and drug side effects. RESULTS: No significant differences were found among groups for health status, SF-36 domain, or occurrence of drug side effects. SS patients had significantly lower scores on vitality (p < 0.03) and a trend toward lower role physical function (p < 0.07) compared with age-adjusted population norms. SS reported more visits to health providers than WC or HT, and the number of visits remained high at interview 1 year later. Patient knowledge of the "reason" for the seizure was not associated with health status or number of visits. CONCLUSIONS: Health status of patients within 1 year of a single seizure is similar to that of patients with well-controlled epilepsy or hypertension, but SS patients have greater health care utilization.


Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Health Status , Quality of Life , Seizures/diagnosis , Seizures/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Aged , Anticonvulsants/therapeutic use , Antihypertensive Agents/therapeutic use , Attitude to Health , Comorbidity , Epilepsy/diagnosis , Epilepsy/drug therapy , Epilepsy/psychology , Female , Health Status Indicators , Humans , Hypertension/diagnosis , Hypertension/drug therapy , Hypertension/psychology , Male , Middle Aged , Patient Education as Topic , Prognosis , Seizures/drug therapy
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