Literature DB >> 17709707

Multiple auras: clinical significance and pathophysiology.

P Widdess-Walsh1, P Kotagal, L Jeha, G Wu, R Burgess.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with partial epilepsy may report multiple types of aura during their seizures. The significance of the occurrence of multiple auras in the same patient is not known.
METHODS: The clinical and electrophysiologic characteristics of patients with more than one aura type (abdominal, auditory, autonomic, gustatory, olfactory, psychic, somatosensory, and visual auras), evaluated in the Cleveland Clinic epilepsy monitoring unit between 1989 and 2005, were studied.
RESULTS: Thirty-one patients experienced multiple aura types during a seizure. Ninety percent of patients with at least two aura types (n = 31) and 100% percent of patients with at least three aura types (n = 12) had seizures arising from the right/nondominant hemisphere. EEG seizures remained restricted in all patients during their auras. nineteen [corrected] patients had epilepsy surgery with seizure freedom in 53%. Subdural EEG recordings in six patients showed either a march of sequential auras, or in one case, several ictal onset zones resulting in separate isolated auras. Ictal SPECT in six patients with right-sided seizures showed a lack of activation in brainstem structures.
CONCLUSIONS: Most patients who report multiple aura types have localized epilepsy in the nondominant hemisphere, and are good surgical candidates. A common mechanism for multiple auras may be a spreading but restricted EEG seizure activating sequential symptomatogenic zones, but without the ictal activation of deeper structures or contralateral spread to cause loss of awareness and amnesia for the auras.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17709707     DOI: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000267650.50269.5d

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurology        ISSN: 0028-3878            Impact factor:   9.910


  2 in total

1.  Multiple auras: not an ominous sign for epilepsy surgery.

Authors:  Bassel W Abou-Khalil
Journal:  Epilepsy Curr       Date:  2008 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 7.500

Review 2.  The piriform cortex and human focal epilepsy.

Authors:  David N Vaughan; Graeme D Jackson
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2014-12-08       Impact factor: 4.003

  2 in total

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