| Literature DB >> 26924970 |
Markus Gschwind1, Fabienne Picard2.
Abstract
Ecstatic epileptic seizures are a rare but compelling epileptic entity. During the first seconds of these seizures, ecstatic auras provoke feelings of well-being, intense serenity, bliss, and "enhanced self-awareness." They are associated with the impression of time dilation, and can be described as a mystic experience by some patients. The functional neuroanatomy of ecstatic seizures is still debated. During recent years several patients presenting with ecstatic auras have been reported by others and us (in total n = 52); a few of them in the setting of presurgical evaluation including electrical brain stimulation. According to the recently recognized functions of the insula, and the results of nuclear brain imaging and electrical stimulation, the ecstatic symptoms in these patients seem to localize to a functional network centered around the anterior insular cortex, where we thus propose to locate this rare ictal phenomenon. Here we summarize the role of the multiple sensory, autonomic, affective, and cognitive functions of the insular cortex, which are integrated into the creation of self-awareness, and we suggest how this system may become dysfunctional on several levels during ecstatic aura.Entities:
Keywords: bliss; ecstatic; epilepsy; insula; predictive coding; salience; self-awareness; time dilation
Year: 2016 PMID: 26924970 PMCID: PMC4756129 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2016.00021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Fyodor Dostoevsky, 1871.
Description of the cases of ecstatic seizures reported in the literature.
| Penfield and Kristiansen, | 1 7 years, m (case H.M) | 1. “Sensation of joy” in the epigastrium | 2. Perceptiual illusion | EEG: epileptiform left mid-temporal | Symptoms started after (sic) epilepsy surgery in two left frontal gyri for partial seizures | Left |
| Alajouanine, | 25 years, f | 2. Suave feeling rises. 3. Wings take her to the sky, feels happiness and liberty | 1. Epigastric aura, 4. sweet and pleasant shudder in left body half | EEG: bilateral temporal spike and waves | Neurosyphilis | Rather left |
| Mulder and Daly, | 23 years, f | 1. Pleasant butterfly in stomach. 5. Euphoric and talkative | 2. Right head deviation 3. got blank. 4. chewing automatisms, 6. purposeless movements with both hands | X-ray: calcified lesion in deep temporal region | Tumoral lesion | Right |
| Subirana, | 44 years, m | 1. Sudden feeling of happiness “complete out of this world” | – | EEG: focal temporal slowing | Glioblastoma–removed | Left |
| 45 years, m | 1. Indescribable happiness “knew what it was like to be in heaven” - impression that it lasts for hours | People appeared completely different | EEG: left anterior temporal slow waves and spikes | Left | ||
| Feindel and Penfield, | (case 6) | “Slightly like going into a trance.”—"Time and space seem occupied | Confuse sensation in head | Stimulation: right medio-temporal /insular border | Right | |
| Williams, | 41 years, f (case 35) | Sudden feeling of being lifted up, elation, satisfaction, most pleasant sense, ≪ knowledge no one else shares ≫, between life and dead | Palpitations, pale and trembling, | ? | ? | |
| 32 years, m (case 36) | Sudden feeling of extreme well-being in all senses. …“as if in another world” | Pleasant epigastric sensation, beautiful colors and indescribable taste | Cortical atrophy | Left | ||
| Mullan and Penfield, | 25 years, m (case 38) | 2. Illusion of greater awareness, “new awareness” (of smells, sounds, visible objects, and pressures) | 1. Rising epigastric aura; 3. unconsciousness; 4. mastication; 5. automatisms | Electrical Stimulation: right anterior insula, 1 cm. deep. produced a sensation in his right foot. (felt, as he did in his attacks, an increased awareness) | Right | |
| Boudouresques et al., | 20 years, m | 2. Like being high on drugs, 4. ineffable beatitude, calm euphoria, bliss, | 1. Epigastric anxiety, 3. déjà-vécu, 5. urge to defecation | Gaseous encephalography: bilateral hippocampal calcifications | Urbach-Wiethe Syndrome | |
| Cirignotta et al., | 30 years, m | Ineffable joy. Intense pleasure without match in reality (perhaps music). Absence of all disagreeable feelings | Psychomotor arrest | EEG: Right temporal spikes during ecstatic seizure | Right | |
| Naito and Matsui, | 6 2 years, f | Extreme happiness as if she was in paradise | Tears of happiness. Sees halo around god | EEG. Left anterior spikes during sleep | Left | |
| Morgan, | 38 years, m | 3. feels at the source of knowledge and understanding, 4. time dilation | 1. prompt irritation and detachment | CT/surgery: Lesion in inferior lateral temporal lobe | Astrocytoma | Right |
| Cabrera-Valdivia et al., | 25, f | Internal peace, calmness, intense (non-sexual) pleasure, like being drugged | Rares generalizations | MRI normal EEG during television proximity: generalized spikes and polyspike-wave complexes | Episodes induced by close proximity to television (self-induction) | |
| Vuilleumier et al., | 37 years, f | Feeling of consciousness of everything. Heautoscopy - astral travel, intense ecstasy | Brief epigastric sensations | MRI normal. EEG: generalized parietal spike and waves and 4Hz temporoparietal spike-and-wave (both right>left) | Right | |
| Vera et al., | 45 years, m | 2. Feeling union with the whole world and with god | 1. Sees flickering blue lights | No EEG | right occipital AVM (=>removal stopped ecstasy seizures) Hippocampal sclerosis was removed years later | Right |
| Ostrowsky et al., | ?, ? | Pleasant experiential phenomenon reported as a weird feeling of “flying away” | ? | ? | Electrical stimulation of insular cortex | ? |
| Asheim Hansen and Brodtkorb, | 23 years, m (case 1) | Indescribable trance of pleasure | Cold shivers, muscle tension, delicious taste. automatic swallowing – post-ictal aphasia | MRI: normal EEG: normal | ? | |
| 55 years, m (case 2) | 3. Profound relaxation | 1. Jerks in right face; - 2. grin – often occurred when passing a particular place. - recalling former fits could trigger fits | MRI: Left parieto-occipital atrophy EEG: epileptiform left temporal | Left | ||
| 62 years, f (case 3) | 1. Overwhelming warm, wooly, pleasant feeling spreading through the skin - | 2. Post-ictal headache and nausea | None | ? | ||
| 41 years, f (case 4) | 1. Intense sensation in stomach (“helplessly in love”). 2. voice comes from god (while agnostic) | 2. Sometimes heard voices 3. anxiety and fear accompanied by shuddering and an urge to swallow | MRI: normal EEG. unspecific fronto-temporal (right ?) | Right? | ||
| 37 years, f (case 5) | Feeling of unfamiliarity with her surroundings accompanied by a vague erotic component. delightful wooly feeling in her head. | Buzzing sound in ears, Ictus emeticus (before surgery) – disappeared after surgery | EEG: epileptiform right frontotemporal | Hippocampal sclerosis | Right | |
| 51 years, m (case 6) | Clairvoyance feeling of a “telepathic contact with a divine power” | Like “twinkling polar light” in his pelvic region | Normal MRI EEG: epileptiform left ? frontotemporal | Left | ||
| 41 years, f (case 7) | 2. Intense happy feeling, | 1. crossing a line as if the world was divided; smell of sawdust and a stereotyped image of herself as a child superimposed on her real vision 3. Sees her grandfather during fit | None | ? | ||
| 53 years, f (case 8) | 2. Delightful sensation of “inebriation and floating” and she feels that her mind leaves the body | 1. Thirst and urge to swallow; hears music.—post-ictal dysphasia and urge to urinate | MRI normal EEG: epileptiform left frontotemporal | Left | ||
| 30 years, f (case 9) | sees wise woman who presents to her ultimate mission of life. Unable to interpret the details, but seems extremely important. - She admits dose reduction of her AED to enhance seizures | Strange music, harsh taste, numb prickling sensation in her right arm | EEG: Left temporal seizure onset | left mesial temporal sclerosis | Left | |
| 48 years, f (case 10) | Sudden indescribably pleasant and joyous feeling | Faintness and oral automatisms | MRI: left temporal lesion (surgery) EEG: Epileptiform right temporal | Low grade glioma removed from left temporal lobe, but seizures persisted. right HS | ? | |
| 48 years, m (case 11) | Erotic aspect, starts in stomach and spreads upwards. “Like an explosion.” - Peculiar unification to others | Senses red and orange colors without seeing the color, déjà-vu, queer taste and gooseflesh | MRI: Lesion in right temporal lobe | anaplastic oligodendroglioma | Right | |
| Isnard et al., | 23 years, m | Mirth, clairvoyance | Orofacial and bodily somatosensory symptoms, throat and dysarthria, preserved contact | MRI right parietal cortical dysplasia and schizencephaly SEEG: posterior insula with propagation in temporal operculum and parietal operculum | cortical dysplasia and schizencephaly | Right |
| Stefan et al., | 26 years, m (case 1) | 1. Pleasant feeling in head; intimacy feeling and feeling of happiness | 2. Staring gaze (interictal depression) | MRI: Right tumor hippocampus and parahippocampus | Astrocytoma | Right |
| 56 years, m (case 2) | 2. Hot pleasant feeling in head arising. Feeling like orgasm | 1. Unpleasant smell 3. staring gaze, swallowing | MRI: Right hippocampal atrophy | HS | Right | |
| 29 years, f (case 3) | 1. Strange feeling (lightly dozy) of pleasant security “like orgasm” | 2. Seeing of letters and signs; 3. after that, fear 4. Loss of consciousness, oral automatisms | MRI: gyrus occipitotemporal lesion | Oligodendroglio- ma of left occipi- totemporal gyrus | Left | |
| 36 years, m (case 4) | 1. Strange, pleasant, rising feeling, mainly by coldness or fever | 2. Clouding of consciousness with staring gaze, chewing movement (interictal depression) | MRI: left hippocampal atrophy | HS | Left | |
| 36 years, m (case 5) | 1. By eating of sharp spices and sauces; orgasm-like feeling with prickling in the perineum | 2. Loss of consciousness with staring gaze; right arm is rubbing on left arm; ictal speech | MRI: right hippocampal atrophy | HS | Right | |
| 43 years, f (case 6) | 1. Pleasant feeling, euphoria, safe feeling, feeling of flying | 2. Fear, cold shiver, depression 3. staring gaze, oral automatisms | MRI: parietal atrophy | Parietal atrophy, bilateral with right predominance | Right | |
| 56 years, f (case 7) | 1. From chest; rising pleasant feeling in head; followed by (ictal) depression | 2. Staring gaze and pain 3. Automatisms and postictal aphasia | MRI: left temporomesial. lesion | Cavernoma | Left | |
| 60 years, m (case 8) | 1. From stomach; in head, rising pleasant feeling | 2. Visual field is changing; contortion of faces 3. Déìjà-vu experiences, staring gaze, oral automatism | MRI: right parahippocampal lesion | Ganglioglioma, parahippocampal + mesial right | Right | |
| 58 years, f (case 9) | Dizzy and hot feeling in head with pleasant feeling, happy | (Interictal depression) | MRI: Temporal (HS ?) | Gliosis | Right | |
| 42 years, m (case 10) | Pleasant feeling, and feels euphoria | 1. Hearing slightly 2. staring gaze, oral automatism. (interictal depression) | MRI: Temporal tumor | Astrocytoma | Left | |
| 36 years, m (case 11) | Pleasant feeling | Epigastric | MRI: Temporal lateral-basal lesion | Right temporal DNET | Right | |
| Picard and Craig, | 53 years, f (case 1) | Never-felt surreal warmth, filling up her body from her feet to her head, complete serenity, almost religious | MRI: Left temporopolar lesion with compression of surroundings | Meningioma | Left | |
| 37, m (case 2) | “Unalterable bliss, escape into the time space of my body.” “Moment of fullness in the loophole of time.” | Déjà vu | MRI/surgery: Right parahippocampal lesion Ictal EEG: 1. right anterior temporal rhythmic elements (7-8 Hz), 2.diffuse flattening, 3. diffuse slow waves, 4. right temporal delta slow waves | Tumoral mass | Right | |
| 25, m (case 3) | Sensation of intense well-being, becoming stronger and stronger, until being unbearable, leading to loss of consciousness | Sensation of loss of balance with gaze fixation difficulties | Normal MRI. Interictal EEG: rare theta slow waves in the left anterior temporal area | Left ? | ||
| 36, f (case 4) | Intense pleasant feeling, heightened self-consciousness, feels discharged from anything else. Concomitant warmth rising in her body up to her head, | Tachycardia | Normal MRI. Interictal EEG: bursts of left anterior and midtemporal sharp theta slow waves | Left | ||
| 64, f (case 5) | Well-being of almost spiritual consonance | Post-ictal jargonophasia - A joy or relief can trigger seizures | MRI: Lesion in left temporal pole region. interictal EEG: left anterior temporofrontal epileptiform activity | Meningioma | Left | |
| Landtblom, | 35, m | 1. Pleasant feeling that someone stands behind him, with a distinct wish to support and comfort, wherever he goes | 2. State of altered consciousness, nausea, irritation of the throat, and urge to urinate | MRI: left hippocampal atrophy, ventricular asymmetry. EEG: seizure occurs at most medial subtemporal electrode on the left side SPECT: left anterior insula activation | Left | |
| Carrazana and Cheng, | 77, m | 1. Aura of bright, “beautiful,” and expanding light appears over his left side. Sense of being “calm,” “at peace,” like a tunnel, into which his soul is transported. Unconditional love, God | 2. Impaired consciousness for several seconds, 3. violent head and body turn toward the left side, and generalized clonic movements | MRI: large encephalomalacia involving the right temporal lobe with ex-vacuo dilation of the right lateral ventricle. EEG: focal slowing, poorly defined sharp waves over the right frontotemporal area | Car accident causing right temporal depressed skull fracture and bilateral subdural hematomas | right |
| Picard, | 17 years, m (case 1) | Sudden understanding and meaningfulness, time dilatation | Gustatory hallucinations. seizures were all triggered by a pleasant context | MRI: lateral temporal pole tumoral lesion | Ganglioglioma in lateral temporal pole | Right |
| 39 years, m (case 2) | Like a continuous series of profound “aha!” moments.” Everything is joined together into one whole, certainty immune to rational doubt | MRI normal | ? | |||
| Picard et al., | 23 years, f | Intense feelings of bliss and well-being – enhanced sensory perception with intense perception of colors – subjective time dilation | Sensation of airflow that left her stomach with a feeling of “floating” – post-ictal loss of consciousness with gestural and oroalimentary automatisms | MRI normal. EEG: spontaneous seizure in right mesiotemporal cortex | => Electrical stimulation of right anterior insula causes symptoms | Right |
| Surbeck et al., | 49 years, f | Orgasmic feeling | Visual symptoms (flashing lights), déjà vu | MRI: discrete atrophy of the left hippocampus EEG: bilateral temporal spikes | Electrical stimulation triggered the symptoms => left hippocampus at 3 mA. with 18-s afterdischarge over the left hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, and anterior-inferior insula. => right hippocampus at 1 mA with a 45-s seizure discharge over the right hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, temporal pole, and anterior insula | ? |
| Ronchi et al., | 43 years, m | short euphoric states | Generalized tonic-clonic seizure | MRI: neoplastic lesion, affecting the entire right insula | Neoplastic | Right |
The numbers in columns “ecstatic semiology” and “associated symptoms” represent the chronological order of the symptoms during seizure.
According to oral communication with the authors this patient described only the “mental part” of an orgasmic feeling, however, this was not specified in the report.
These patients probably presented only the physical aspect of well-being.
In these patients electrical stimulation could reproduce an ecstatic phenomenon.
SEEG, stereo-electroencephalographic electrode implantation; HS, Hippocampal sclerosis; DNET, dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor; SPECT, Single-photon emission computed tomography; SISCOM, Subtracted ictal SPECT, coregistered with MRI (O'brien et al., 1998).
Figure 2Anatomy of the insula, as disclosed in the depth of the lateral fissure. H = the posterior medial stub of the transverse temporal gyrus of Heschl (primary auditory cortex) that was resected to uncover the posterior long insular gyrus. The central sulcus (black arrow) divides the lateral surface of the insula into a small posterior insular lobule, composed of the anterior long (AL) and posterior long (PL) insular gyri that converge to the limen insulae (Li), and a large anterior insular lobule, composed of the anterior short (A), the middle short (M) and the posterior short (P) insular gyri that converge to the apex of the insula (*). The anterior face of the insula displays a variably present accessory insular gyrus (Ac) and a constant transverse insular gyrus (tg) that connects with the orbital surface of the frontal lobe. The red arrow marks the sulcus between the anterior short and middle short gyri, where the functional “overlap region” was found by Kurth et al. (2010). Figure courtesy of Drs. Thomas P. Naidich and Mary E. Fowkes, the Icahn School of Medicine at Mt. Sinai, New York.
Figure 3A factorial analysis of emotional ratings after listening to different pieces of music, including the nine emotional categories of the Geneva Emotional Music Scale (GEMS) model (Zentner et al., . The results show two main components, arousal () and valence (), that best describe these behavioral data in 31 participants.
Figure 4Illustration of the networks implicated in salience processing, as obtained by the meta-analysis tool Neurosynth.org (Yarkoni et al., . The resulting significant regions (p < 0.01, FDR corrected) interestingly comprise four networks: Yellow: anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and anterior insula (AI) represent the salience network (Seeley et al., 2007b). Orange: the extended insular network consisting of amygdala (AM), ventral striatum (vS), periaqueductal gray (PAG), and dorsomedial thalamus (dmTHal). Green: the PCC-VMPFC represents the default mode network (Greicius et al., 2003). Blue: the fronto-parietal executive control network (Corbetta and Shulman, 2002; Fox et al., 2006). The salience network is thought to switch back and forth between the default mode network and executive control network (Menon and Uddin, 2010; Uddin, 2015).