| Literature DB >> 22957241 |
Abstract
Epilepsy represents a multifaceted group of disorders divided into two broad categories, partial and generalized, based on the seizure onset zone. The identification of the neuroanatomic site of seizure onset depends on delineation of seizure semiology by a careful history together with video-EEG, and a variety of neuroimaging technologies such as MRI, fMRI, FDG-PET, MEG, or invasive intracranial EEG recording. Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is the commonest form of focal epilepsy and represents almost 2/3 of cases of intractable epilepsy managed surgically. A history of febrile seizures (especially complex febrile seizures) is common in TLE and is frequently associated with mesial temporal sclerosis (the commonest form of TLE). Seizure auras occur in many TLE patients and often exhibit features that are relatively specific for TLE but few are of lateralizing value. Automatisms, however, often have lateralizing significance. Careful study of seizure semiology remains invaluable in addressing the search for the seizure onset zone.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22957241 PMCID: PMC3420439 DOI: 10.1155/2012/751510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epilepsy Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1348
Temporal and frontal lobe seizures differential semiological features.
| Features | Temporal | Frontal |
|---|---|---|
| Sz frequancy | Less frequent | Often daily |
| Sz onset | Slower | Abrupt, explosive |
| Sleep activation | Less common | Characteristic |
| Progression | Slower | Rapid |
| Automatisms | Common-longer | Less common |
| Initial motionless stare | Common | Less common |
| Complex postures | Late, less frequent, less prominent | Frequent, prominent, and early |
| Hypermotor | Rare | Common |
| Bipedal automatisms | Rare | Characteristic |
| Somatosensory Sx | Rare | Common |
| Vocalization | Speech (nondominant) | Loud, nonspeech (grunt, scream, moan) |
| Seizure duration | Longer | Brief |
| Secondary generalization | Less common | Common |
| Postictal confusion | More prominent-longer | Less prominent, Short |
| Postictal aphasia | Common in dominant hemisphere | Rare unless spreads to temporal lobe |
Semiological Features (TLE) - Lateralizing or Localizing Value.
| Feature | Location |
|---|---|
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| Unilateral limb automatism | Ipsilateral focus |
| Oral automatism | (m)Temporal lobe |
| Unilateral eye blinks | Ipsilateral to focus |
| Postictal cough | Temporal lobe |
| Postictal nose wiping | Ipsilateral temporal lobe |
| Ictal spitting or drinking | Temporal lobe focus (R) |
| Gelastic seizures | (m)Temporal, hypothalamic, frontal (cingulate) |
| Dacrystic seizures | (m)Temporal, hypothalamic |
| Unilateral limb automatisms | Ipsilateral focus |
| Whistling | Temporal lobe |
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| Ictal emeticus | Temporal lobe focus (R) |
| Ictal urinary urge | Temporal lobe focus (R) |
| Piloerection | Temporal lobe focus (L) |
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| Early nonforced head turn | Ipsilateral focus |
| Late version | Contralateral focus |
| Eye deviation | Contralateral focus |
| Focal clonic jerking | Contralateral perirolandic focus |
| Asymmetrical clonic ending | Ipsilateral focus |
| Fencing (M2E) | Contralateral (supplementary motor) |
| Figure 4 | Contralateral to the extended limb (temporal) |
| Tonic limb posturing | Contralateral focus |
| Dystonic limb posturing | Contralateral focus |
| Unilateral ictal paresis | Contralateral focus |
| Postictal Todd's paresis | Contralateral focus |
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| Ictal speech arrest | Temporal lobe (usually dominant hemisphere) |
| Ictal speech preservation | Temporal lobe (usually nondominant) |
| Postictal aphasia | Temporal lobe (dominant hemisphere) |