| Literature DB >> 28775949 |
Dong Wook Kim1, Sang Kun Lee2.
Abstract
Headache, especially migraine, has long been associated with epilepsy, based on the common clinical features of these disorders. Both migraine and epilepsy have a genetic predisposition and share common pathophysiological mechanisms including an imbalance between excitatory and inhibitory factors that result in spells of altered brain function and autonomic symptoms. There are well-documented reports on the headache as a sole manifestation of epileptic seizure and headache is commonly associated with as preictal, ictal, and postictal symptoms in epilepsy patients. In addition, migraine and epilepsy are frequently described as highly comorbid conditions and several antiepileptic drugs are used for the patients with migraine as well as epilepsy. In the present review, we briefly discuss the connection between headache and epilepsy in various aspects, including classification, clinical features, epidemiology, genetics, pathophysiology, and treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Epidemiology; Epilepsy; Genetics; Headache; Migraine; Treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 28775949 PMCID: PMC5540694 DOI: 10.14581/jer.17002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Epilepsy Res ISSN: 2233-6249
Headache Associated Epileptic Seizure in International Classification of Headache Disorders
| Complication of migraine | Headache attributed to epileptic seizure | ||
|---|---|---|---|
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|
| ||
| Criteria | Migraine aura-triggered seizure | Hemicrania epileptica | Postictal headache |
| A | A seizure fulfilling diagnostic criteria for one type of epileptic attack, and criterion B below | Any headache fulfilling criterion C | Any headache fulfilling criterion C |
| B | Occurring in a patient with migraine with aura, and during, or within 1 hour after, an attack of migraine with aura | The patient is having a partial epileptic seizure | The patient has recently had a partial or generalized epileptic seizure |
| C | Not better account for by another diagnosis | Evidence of causation demonstrated by both of the following:
Headahce has developed simultaneously with onset of the partial seizure Either or both of the following: headache has significantly improved immediately after the partial seizure has terminated headache is ipsilateral to the ictal discharge | Evidence of causation demonstrated by both of the following:
Headahce has developed within 3 hours after the epileptic seizure has terminated Headache has resolved within 72 hours after the epileptic seizure has terminated |
| D | Not better accounted for by another diagnosis | Not better accounted for by another diagnosis | |
Semiological seizure classification
| Aura | |
| Somatosensory aura | Visual aura |
| Auditory aura | Gustatory aura |
| Olfactory aura | Autonomic aura |
| Abdominal aura | Psychic aura |
| Autonomic seizure | |
| Dialeptic seizure | |
| Typical dialeptic seizure | |
| Motor seizure | |
| Simple Motor Seizure | |
| Myoclonic seizure | Tonic seizure |
| Epileptic spasm | Clonic seizure |
| Tonic-clonic seizure | Versive seizure |
| Complex Motor Seizure | |
| Hypermotor seizure | Gelastic seizure |
| Automotor seizure | |
| Special seizure | |
| Atonic seizure | Astatic seizure |
| Hypomotor seizure | Akinetic seizure |
| Negative motor seizure | Aphasic seizure |