| Literature DB >> 26491330 |
Massimiliano Beghi1, Paola Beffa Negrini2, Cecilia Perin3, Federica Peroni3, Adriana Magaudda4, Cesare Cerri3, Cesare Maria Cornaggia3.
Abstract
In Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition, psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) do not have a unique classification as they can be found within different categories: conversion, dissociative, and somatization disorders. The ICD-10, instead, considers PNES within dissociative disorders, merging the dissociative disorders and conversion disorders, although the underlying defense mechanisms are different. The literature data show that PNES are associated with cluster B (mainly borderline) personality disorders and/or to people with depressive or anxiety disorders. Defense mechanisms in patients with PNES with a prevalence of anxious/depressive symptoms are of "neurotic" type; their goal is to lead to a "split", either vertical (dissociation) or horizontal (repression). The majority of patients with this type of PNES have alexithymia traits, meaning that they had difficulties in feeling or perceiving emotions. In subjects where PNES are associated with a borderline personality, in which the symbolic function is lost, the defense mechanisms are of a more archaic nature (denial). PNES with different underlying defense mechanisms have different prognoses (despite similar severity of PNES) and need usually a different treatment (pharmacological or psychological). Thus, it appears superfluous to talk about psychiatric comorbidity, since PNES are a different symptomatic expression of specific psychiatric disorders.Entities:
Keywords: PNES; comorbidity; defense mechanisms; epilepsy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26491330 PMCID: PMC4599147 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S82079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Signs used to distinguish between psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) and epileptic seizures (ES)
| Variable | PNES | ES |
|---|---|---|
| Length | Usually >2 minutes | Usually <2 minutes |
| Onset | Usually gradual | Usually sudden |
| Trigger (light, sound) | Common | Uncommon |
| Location | Usually at home | Variable |
| Asyncronous movement of limbs | Common | Rare |
| Side to side head movement | Common | Rare |
| Side tongue bite | Rare | Common |
| Scream | Common | Only at the beginning |
| Cianosis | Rare | Common |
| Postictal confusion | Rare | Common |
| Eyelid closure | Very common | Rare |
| Eyelid opening resistance | Very common | Rare |
| Hurt | Rare | Common |
Psychiatric disorders and psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES)
| Study | Number of patients | Variables studied | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Turner et al | 21 patients with epileptic seizures (ES), 22 patients with PNES, and 10 patients with ES associated with PNES (video EEG) | Psychiatric diagnosis SCID I and SCID II | Psychiatric diagnosis in 100% of PNES and 52% of ES. Cluster B personality disorders more common and mood and anxiety disorders less common in patients with PNES. |
| Kanner et al | Review | Depression in PNES | Reported prevalence rate of depressive disorders in adults with PNES, determined by interviews based on DSM-III-R or DSM-IV criteria, ranges from 21% to 60%. |
| Szaflarski and Szaflarski | 53 epilepsy (ES) patients and 53 PNES patients (video EEG) | Quality of life (QOLIE-89), depression (POMS) | Depression lowers the QOL in both ES and PNES; PNES lower QOL, even without depression. |
| Myers et al | 82 consecutive PNES patients (video EEG) | Quality of life (QOLIE-31), personality (MMPI-2-RF) anger (STAXI-2) | Depression, pain syndromes, older age of onset, shorter duration of PNES, elevated anger state, trait and total anger scores lower QOL. |
| Scévola et al | 35 patients with PNES and 49 patients with drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE) | Psychiatric diagnosis SCID I and SCID II | Axis I psychiatric disorder in 100% of PNES patients and in 67% of DRE patients. Anxiety disorders, trauma history, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and personality cluster B disorders more common and psychotic disorders less common in PNES patients. Depression equally prevalent in both groups. |
| Hingray et al | 19 PNES patients with trauma, six PNES patients without trauma | Psychiatric diagnosis MINI II, alexithymia with Toronto Alexithymia Scale (TAS), dissociation with Dissociative Experience Scale (DES) | Patients with trauma at least one psychiatric comorbidity or antecedent (vs 0% in the no-trauma group, |
| Bowman and Markand | 45 adults with PNES | Psychiatric diagnosis SCID I and SCID II, trauma history | In PNES, there are high rates for somatoform disorders, dissociative disorders, affective disorders, personality disorders, PTSD, and other anxiety. The lifetime occurrence of non-seizure conversion disorders is 82%. 84% of the subjects reported trauma (67% sexual abuse, 67% physical abuse, and 73% other traumas). |
| Fiszman et al | Review of 17 studies | The prevalence of traumatic events and/or PTSD in PNES | PNES patients have very high rates of trauma (44%–100%) and abuse (23%–77%), which were 15%–40% higher than in control groups. PNES samples also showed a higher prevalence of PTSD than control groups. |
| Tojek et al | 25 adults with PNES and 33 adults with epilepsy | Psychiatric disorders with brief symptoms inventory, life events with life events checklist | Stressful negative life events (including adulthood abuse) and more current rumination, stress-related diseases, somatic symptoms, bodily awareness, and marginally more anxiety and depression are more common in PNES. |
| Direk et al | 35 patients with PNES and 35 healthy controls | Psychiatric diagnosis SCID I and SCID II | No significant difference between the patient groups in the prevalence of axis I psychiatric disorders. Personality disorders were more prevalent in the PNES group than in the ES group. |
| Testa et al | 62 patients with PNES, 55 with ES, and 45 healthy control | Psychiatric diagnoses with Personality Assessment Inventory (PAI) | Somatic concerns and symptoms of anxiety and depression more common in PNES and ES patients. Unusual somatic symptoms and greater physical symptoms of anxiety and depression more common in PNES patients only. |
| Thompson et al | 75 patients with PNES and 109 patients with epilepsy | Psychiatric diagnoses with PAI | Somatic, conversion, depressed, anxious, and suicidal symptoms more common in PNES patients. |
| Bodde et al | 41 patients with PNES and 43 patients with insomnia | Personality with MMPI II | No statistically significant quantitative differences on the main clinical scales, somatic complaints and bizarre sensory experiences more common in PNES patients. |
| D’Alessio et al | 43 patients with PNES (24 pure PNES and 19 PNES and ES) | Psychiatric disorders with SCID I and SCID II, demographic characteristics, use of psychotropic drugs | Female population, age, duration of PNES, psychiatric institutionalization, psychopharmacotherapy, dissociative disorders, and PTSD higher in the pure PNES patients. Suicide attempts, antiepileptic therapy, conversive, affective, and personality disorders frequent in both groups. Lack of responsiveness significantly higher in the mixed PNES group. |
| Hovorka et al | 49 PNES patients | Interictal EEG, brain MRI, personality disorders | Interictal EEG was abnormal in 46.4%. Brain MRI was abnormal in 30.4%. Personality disorders were the most frequent psychiatric comorbidity (in 44.6% of PNES patients), emotionally unstable (borderline) personality disorder was predominant (in 32.1% of PNES patients). |
| Asmussen et al | 59 PNES patients vs 60 ES patients | Depression with self-reported PAI and BDI-II | PNES group, particularly PNES females, endorsed a significantly higher level of physiological symptoms of depression as measured by the PAI DEP-P subscale than the ES group; the BDI-II did not differ between groups. |
| Jones et al | 61 PNES patients | Quality of life with the QOLIE-89, psychiatric diagnosis with the SCL-90-R | Poor long-term outcomes with ongoing PNES, high rates of psychopathology (63.2%, 48% depression), low rates of specialist follow-up, poor QOL, and poor overall levels of functioning. |
| Seneviratne et al | 39 PNES patients | Axis I diagnosis by clinical interview | Comorbid chronic medical conditions were found in 38.5% and axis I psychiatric diagnoses in 48.7%. |
Abbreviations: BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory; DSM-III-R, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, third edition, revised; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fourth edition; EEG, electroencephalography; MINI II, Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview II; MMPI II, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory II; MMPI-2-RF, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2 Restructured Form; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PAI DEP-P, Personality Assessment Inventory, Depression (Physiological) subscale; POMS, Profile of Mood States; QOL, quality of life; QOLIE, Quality of Life in Epilepsy Inventory; SCID, severe combined immunodeficiency; SCL-90-R, symptom checklist-90-revised; STAXI-2, State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2.