| Literature DB >> 34113112 |
Alejandra Inés Lanzillotti1, Mercedes Sarudiansky1, Nicolás Robertino Lombardi2, Guido Pablo Korman1, Luciana D Alessio2,3.
Abstract
Psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) are paroxystic and episodic events associated with motor, sensory, mental or autonomic manifestations, which resemble epileptic seizures (ES), but are not caused by epileptogenic activity. PNES affect between 20% and 30% of patients attending at epilepsy centers and constitute a serious mental health problem. PNES are often underdiagnosed, undertreated and mistaken with epilepsy. PNES are diagnosed after medical causes (epilepsy, syncope, stroke, etc.) have been ruled out, and psychological mechanisms are involved in their genesis and perpetuation. For psychiatry, there is not a single definition for PNES; the DSM-IV and ICD-10/11 describe the conversion and dissociative disorders, and the DSM-5 describes the functional neurological disorders. However, patients with PNES also have a high frequency of other comorbidities like depression, particularly trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder. It has been postulated that PNES are essentially dissociations that operate as a defensive psychological mechanism that use the mind as a defense to deal with traumas. With the advent of VEEG in the 90s, the recognition of PNES has significantly increased, and several psychological treatments have been developed. In this manuscript, we carried out a state-of-the-art review, with the aim to provide a critical approach to the extensive literature about PNES, focusing on diagnostic aspects, the primary management, and the available treatments that have been shown to be effective for the improvement of PNES.Entities:
Keywords: conversion disorder; diagnosis; dissociative disorder; psychogenic nonepileptic seizures; treatment
Year: 2021 PMID: 34113112 PMCID: PMC8187153 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S286710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Clinical Manifestations of PNES Based on VEEG Analysis
| Author (n=Number of Patients with PNES) | Gröppel et al 2000 | Selwa et al 2000 | Seneviratne et al 2010 | Hubsch et al 2012 | Dikmen et al 2013 | Wadwekar et al 2013 | Magaudda et al 2016 | Ali Assadi Pooya 2017 | Ali Assadi Pooya 2019 | Madaan et al 2018 | Lombardi et al 2020 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Psychogenic motor seizures | Intermittent 4.7% | Hypermotor (limb and trunk movements, hyperventilation) 3.3% | Hyperkinetic prolonged attack with hyperventilation and auras (limb movements, without trunk, hyperventilation) 11.7% | Complex motor attack: (hypermotor, tonic-clonic, versive.) | Hyperkinetic prolonged attacks with movements of limbs and trunk, hyperventilation 25.9% | Hypermotor | Hypermotor (53–27%) | Hypermotor (89 −79%) | Hypermotor 1.2% | Hypermotor/hyperkinetic | |
| Psychogenic minor motor or trembling seizures (100% lack of responsiveness) | Automatisms 3.5% | Rhythmic motor (83.8% lack of responsiveness) 46.7% | Paucikinetic attack with preserved responsiveness (3.4% lack of responsiveness) 23.4% | Simple motor attack (myoclonic, tremor-like) | Paucikinetic attacks with or without preserved responsiveness 9.3% (80% lack of responsiveness) | Akinetic | Akinetic (28–29%) | Akinetic (11–18% | Rhythmic motor 10% | Automatisms 21.8% | |
| Psychogenic atonic seizures 25.9% (100% lack of responsiveness) | Catatonic Symptoms 22.3% | Dialeptic 11.2% (16% hyperventilation, 100% lack of responsiveness) | Pseudo-syncope 16.9% (85% lack of responsiveness) | Dialeptic attack Special PNES (atonic, astatic, hypotonic) | Pseudosyncope 38–9% | Lack of responsiveness (32 – 82%) | Dialeptic | Lack of responsiveness | |||
| Subjective Symptoms 11.7% | Non-epileptic psychic Aura 23.6% | Non-epileptic aura (psychic/somatosensoy) | Unclassified type 5.6% | Subjective symptoms | Subjective symptoms (55–10%) | Non-epileptic Auras (23–89%) | Non-epileptic aura 13.8% | Non-epileptic Auras |
Note: Resume of the most important reports about semiological manifestations of PNES, according to the clinical studies based on VEEG analysis.
Psychotherapeutic Interventions in Patients with PNES
| Study | Type of Study | Study Participants | Intervention and Duration | Intervention Outcome (Seizure Frequency) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goldstein et al (2004) UK | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=16 | Individual CBT (12x1/week or fortnightly) | 25% reported seizure freedom |
| Goldstein et al (2020) UK | Pragmatic, parallel- group multicentre randomised controlled trial | n=313 | CBT plus standardised medical care (12x1/week or fortnightly) | At 12 months, no significant difference in monthly dissociative seizure frequency was identified between the groups |
| LaFrance et al (2009) USA | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=21 | Individual CBT (12x1/week) | 65% reported seizure freedom. |
| LaFrance et al (2014) USA | Multicenter pilot randomized controlled trial | n=34 | CBT-only: individual CBT (60 min/week x12) TAU; CBT w/Sertraline; Sertraline-only | 33% reported seizure freedom. |
| Myers et al (2017) USA | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=16 | Prolonged exposure psychotherapy. | 81% reported seizure freedom |
| Baslet et al (2020) USA | Prospective uncontrolled trial | n=26 | Individual mindfulness-based psychotherapy (12X1/week or fortnightly) | 50% reported seizure freedom. 23% reported sustained cessation of PNES |
| Mayor et al (2010) UK | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=108 | Psychodynamic IPT (19x50 min/week or fortnight) | 25% reported seizure freedom |
| Mayor et al (2013) UK | Multicentre before-after, noncontrolled study | n=13 | Manualized psychoeducation (4x 60 min/week) | 31% reported seizure freedom. |
| Chen et al (2013) USA | Randomized controlled trial | n=64 | Three successive monthly, 1.5 h long group sessions | No significant group difference in seizure frequency/intensity between groups was found |
| Zaroff et al (2004) USA | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=10 | Group psychoeducational program 3 groups (10x1h/week) | 75% reported seizure freedom |
| Cope et al (2017) UK | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=19 | 3-session cognitive-behavior therapy-informed psychoeducation group | 40% reported seizure freedom at the end of treatment. 63% reported seizure reduction during the intervention period |
| Sharpe et al (2011) UK | Randomized controlled efficacy trial | n=125 | CBT-based self-help workbook and face-to-face guidance sessions | No data available about seizure frequency |
| Sarudiansky et al (2020) Argentina | Before-after non-controlled study | n=12 | 3- group session cognitive behavioral based psychoeducation | 42% reported a reduction in seizure frequency after the intervention |
| Barry et al (2008) USA | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=7 | Group psychodynamic therapy (1x week for 32 weeks) | 57% reported seizure freedom |
| de Oliveira Santos et al (2014) Brazil | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=37 | Individual psychoanalysis (1x50 min/week for 12 months) | 30% reported seizure freedom |
| Kuyk et al (2008) Netherlands | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=22 | Eclectic psychotherapy (individual, group and family). Duration not reported | 27% reported seizure freedom |
| Metin et al (2013) Turkey | Before-after, non-controlled study | n=9 | Group psychoanalytic and behavioural therapy (12 sessions, 90 min/week) | 67% reported seizure freedom |
| Ataoglu et al (2003) Turkey | Randomized controlled trial | n=30 | Individual PIT (2x/day for 3 weeks) | 93% reported seizure freedom |
Note: Resume of the main psychotherapeutic intervention trials reported in the literature and performed in patients with PNES.