| Literature DB >> 32582005 |
Francesca Anzellotti1, Fedele Dono2,3, Giacomo Evangelista2, Martina Di Pietro2, Claudia Carrarini2,3, Mirella Russo2,3, Camilla Ferrante2, Stefano L Sensi2,3,4, Marco Onofrj2,3.
Abstract
Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) are neurobehavioral conditions positioned in a gray zone, not infrequently a no-man land, that lies in the intersection between Neurology and Psychiatry. According to the DSM 5, PNES are a subgroup of conversion disorders (CD), while the ICD 10 classifies PNES as dissociative disorders. The incidence of PNES is estimated to be in the range of 1.4-4.9/100,000/year, and the prevalence range is between 2 and 33 per 100,000. The International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) has identified PNES as one of the 10 most critical neuropsychiatric conditions associated with epilepsy. Comorbidity between epilepsy and PNES, a condition leading to "dual diagnosis," is a serious diagnostic and therapeutic challenge for clinicians. The lack of prompt identification of PNES in epileptic patients can lead to potentially harmful increases in the dosage of anti-seizure drugs (ASD) as well as erroneous diagnoses of refractory epilepsy. Hence, pseudo-refractory epilepsy is the other critical side of the PNES coin as one out of four to five patients admitted to video-EEG monitoring units with a diagnosis of pharmaco-resistant epilepsy is later found to suffer from non-epileptic events. The majority of these events are of psychogenic origin. Thus, the diagnostic differentiation between pseudo and true refractory epilepsy is essential to prevent actions that lead to unnecessary treatments and ASD-related side effects as well as produce a negative impact on the patient's quality of life. In this article, we review and discuss recent evidence related to the neurobiology of PNES. We also provide an overview of the classifications and diagnostic steps that are employed in PNES management and dwell on the concept of pseudo-resistant epilepsy.Entities:
Keywords: PNES; PNES Imaging; PNES psychopathology; PNES treatment; dual diagnosis; functional neurological disorder; pseudo-refractory epilepsy
Year: 2020 PMID: 32582005 PMCID: PMC7280483 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2020.00461
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
PNES classifications.
| Gröppel et al. ( | 1. Major motor |
| Selwa et al. ( | 1. Catatonic |
| Seneviratne et al. ( | 1. Rhytmic motor |
| Hubsh et al. ( | 1. Dystonic attack with primitive gestural activity |
| Dhiman et al. ( | 1. Abnormal motor |
| Magaudda et al. ( | 1. Hypermotor |
Figure 1Simplified scheme of the Integrated Cognitive Model (ICM). PNES result from the automatic execution of acquired mental representations of seizures (i.e., the enacting of a “seizure scaffold”). The seizure scaffold consists of a sequence of perceptions and motor activities shaped by experiences such as inherent reflexes (i.e., freezing movements, startle, wandering) or physical symptoms (i.e., of pre-syncope, dissociation, hyperventilation, head injury). Seizure scaffolds can be triggered by a range of internal or external stimuli. The process often occurs in response to increases in autonomic arousal. However, the seizure scaffold is more likely to be triggered in the presence of dysfunctional inhibition that can be due to chronic stress but also driven by “physical” causes like concurrent illness, effects of medication, etc. Patients usually experience the enactment of the seizure scaffold as non-volitional, although they may be able to inhibit it voluntarily.
PNES models.
| PNES is a physical manifestation of emotional stress | |
| PNES results from learned behavior and activated via operant conditioning | |
| Dissociative models by | PNES results from dissociated memories or mental functions that are set in motion by a traumatic event (Bowman) |
| PNES is an acute dissociative response to a threat or a state of high arousal (Baslet) | |
| Integrated Cognitive Model (ICM) by | PNES results from an altered stimulus that in physiological conditions would have caused the activation of memory networks; the response to the stimulus depends on the familiarity with it. A familiar stimulus, already represented and stored in the networks, generates the automated execution of a motor program. If the stimulus is unfamiliar and memory networks are not primed, no-automated responses are generated. A secondary attention system that selects responses to be executed is also involved. Action is perceived as voluntary and self-controlled. |
Differential diagnostic features PNES and epileptic seizures.
| Aura | Less frequent | More frequent |
| Length of ictal events | >10 min | <70 s (<2 min for tonic-clonic seizures) |
| Seizure patterns | Non-stereotypical, less organized spatial patterns, variable rhythmicity, and amplitude of movements | Stereotypical and organized progression |
| Clinical findings | Asynchronous limb movements, out-of-phase clonic activity, rhythmic shaking movements with episodes of inactivity, side-to-side head movements, pelvic movements, dystonic body posturing, closure of the eyes during the event | Bilateral adduction and external rotations of limbs followed by tonic extension of all four limbs, then the production of diffuse clonic jerking movements before the ictal offset |
| Vocalization | Present not only at the beginning of the event, can fluctuate, persist and be present, with different pitch intensities, throughout the whole course of the ictal episode | At the beginning of the seizures |
| Subjective symptoms | Less frequent | More frequent |
| Urinary incontinence | Less frequent | More frequent |
| Occurrence at night | Less frequent | More frequent |
| Ictal self-injury | Less frequent | More frequent |
A word of caution is required as, according to recent evidence, the prevalence of aura, subjective symptoms, urinary incontinence, night occurrence of ictal events, and self-injury in PNES patients is higher than what previously researches reported, thereby making challenging to discriminate PNES and epileptic seizures only based on clinical signs.