| Literature DB >> 31437864 |
Lukas Heydrich1,2,3, Guillaume Marillier1, Nathan Evans1, Margitta Seeck2, Olaf Blanke1,2,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Depersonalization refers to the sensation of being detached from one's body, often associated with feelings of loss of control over one's own body, actions, or thoughts. Derealization refers to the altered perception of one's surroundings that is experienced as unreal. Although usually reported by psychiatric patients suffering from depression or anxiety, single case reports and small case series have described depersonalization- and derealization-like symptoms in the context of epilepsy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31437864 PMCID: PMC6764488 DOI: 10.1002/acn3.50870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Transl Neurol ISSN: 2328-9503 Impact factor: 4.511
Demographic patient characteristics in patients with DP, DR. DV and EH.
| Depersonalization | Derealization | Déjà vu | Experiential hallucinations |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male/female | 3/6 | 3/4 | 7/9 | 8/4 | >0.05 |
| Age at evaluation (years) | 33.8 | 32.0 | 32.0 | 32.4 | >0.05 |
| Handedness (right/left/ambidextrous) | 7/2/0 | 7/0/0 | 14/1/1 | 11/0/1 | >0.05 |
| Duration of epilepsy (years) | 14.4 | 16.5 | 12.6 | 11.4 | >0.05 |
| Seizure frequency (p.a.) | 335 | 562 | 238 | 153 | >0.05 |
| Neurological examination (normal/pathological) | 4/5 | 4/3 | 12/4 | 9/3 | >0.05 |
| Family history (positive/negative) | 2/7 | 2/5 | 1/13 | 1/9 | >0.05 |
| Psychiatric diagnosis (yes/no) | 0/9 | 1/6 | 3/5 | 4/2 | 0.019 |
| Surgical therapy (yes/no) | 7/2 | 5/2 | 13/3 | 9/3 | >0.05 |
| Favourable outcome after surgery (yes/no/unknown) | 4/3 | 4/1 | 13/0 | 6/2/1 | 0.05 |
Information could not be retrieved retrospectively for all the patients, therefore N differs from the total N.
Refers only to the patients being operated (N = 34). Significance level after correction for multiple comparisons (Bonferroni correction) = 0.004.
Clinical characteristics and semiology in patients with DP.
| Patient | Diagnosis | Lesion | Lesion analysis | Neurology | Semiology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| DP 1 | Epilepsy/dysplasia | Parietal cortex (L) | MRI, EEG, PET, SPECT | Vertigo and tinnitus | Feeling to lose the control over the right hemi‐body, feeling of the right arm being elevated while the right side of the trunk was lowered relative to the left side |
| DP 2 | Epilepsy/oligodendroglioma | Frontal cortex (R) | MRI, EEG, PET, SPECT | Impaired short term and working memory | Altered touch (whole body), dissociation of body and mind (feeling detached of the body without leaving the body) |
| DP 3 | Epilepsy/autoimmune | Temporal cortex (R) | MRI, EEG, PET, SPECT | Executive dysfunction | Feeling that someone enters her body, takes control of the body |
| DP 4 | Epilepsy/dysplasia | Frontal cortex (R) | MRI, EEG, PET, SPECT | Normal | Feeling that his body is useless, is not feeling his body, he thinks that his body is disconnected from his head |
| DP 5 | Epilepsy/DNET | Parieto‐occipital cortex (R) | MRI, EEG, PET, SPECT | Normal | Detachment of physical body, strong visual‐vestibular sensations |
| DP 6 | Epilepsy/posttraumatic | Frontal and temporo‐parietal cortex (R) | MRI, EEG | Left hemi‐neglect (visual, sensory, auditory)/Anosognosia and prosopagnosia | Detachment of physical body, strong visual‐vestibular sensations |
| DP 7 | Epilepsy/inflammatory lesion | Frontal cortex (L) | MRI, EEG, SPECT | Discrete motor hemi‐syndrome right/Semantic paraphasia | Altered touch of the right hand has changed, right side of body feels strange |
| DP 8 | Epilepsy/neurocysteriosis | Frontal cortex, Insula (R) | MRI, EEG | Left hemi‐spatial neglect/left‐sided diadochokinesis and dysmetria | Loosing control of left hand, detachment and feeling of a presence |
| DP 9 | Epilepsy/vasculitis | Frontal and occipital cortex (L) | MRI, EEG | Right sided sensorimotor hemi‐syndrome, right hemianopia | Sensation of body distortion, detachment |
PET, positron emission tomography; MRI, magnet resonance imaging; EEG, electroencephalography; SPECT, single photon emission computed tomography; MNI, Montreal Neurological Institute.
Figure 1Epileptogenic zone in patients with ictal depersonalization‐like phenomena. Lesion overlap analysis highlighted the right medio‐dorsal premotor cortex (PMC) [cantered on Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) x = 18, y = −5, z = 59, Brodmann area 6], which was found to be involved in in five out of nine patients with DP. The number of overlapping lesions is illustrated by color, from violet (n = 3) to red (maximal lesion overlap, n = 5).
Figure 2Epileptogenic zone in patients with ictal derealization‐like phenomena. Lesion overlap analysis highlighted the right posterior mesial temporal lobe (MTL) [centered on Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) x = 28, y = −21, z = −14], which was found to be involved in four out of seven patients with DR. The number of overlapping lesions is illustrated by color, from violet (n = 2) to red (maximal lesion overlap, n = 4).