| Literature DB >> 34865660 |
Johann Philipp Zöllner1,2, Friedhelm C Schmitt3, Felix Rosenow4,5, Konstantin Kohlhase4,5, Alexander Seiler4, Adam Strzelczyk4,5, Hermann Stefan6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the increased efficacy of stroke treatments, diagnosis and specific treatment needs of patients with post-stroke seizures (PSS) and post-stroke epilepsy have become increasingly important. PSS can complicate the diagnosis of a stroke and the treatment of stroke patients, and can worsen post-stroke morbidity. This narrative review considers current treatment guidelines, the specifics of antiseizure treatment in stroke patients as well as the state-of-the-art in clinical and imaging research of post-stroke epilepsy. Treatment of PSS needs to consider indications for antiseizure medication treatment as well as individual clinical and social factors. Furthermore, potential interactions between stroke and antiseizure treatments must be carefully considered. The relationship between acute recanalizing stroke therapy (intravenous thrombolysis and mechanical thrombectomy) and the emergence of PSS is currently the subject of an intensive discussion. In the subacute and chronic post-stroke phases, important specific interactions between necessary antiseizure and stroke treatments (anticoagulation, cardiac medication) need to be considered. Among all forms of prevention, primary prevention is currently the most intensively researched. This includes specifically the repurposing of drugs that were not originally developed for antiseizure properties, such as statins. PSS are presently the subject of extensive basic clinical research. Of specific interest are the role of post-stroke excitotoxicity and blood-brain barrier disruption for the emergence of PSS in the acute symptomatic as well as late (> 1 week after the stroke) periods. Current magnetic resonance imaging research focussing on glutamate excitotoxicity as well as diffusion-based estimation of blood-brain barrier integrity aim to elucidate the pathophysiology of seizures after stroke and the principles of epileptogenesis in structural epilepsy in general. These approaches may also reveal new imaging-based biomarkers for prediction of PSS and post-stroke epilepsy.Entities:
Keywords: Anticonvulsants; Antiepileptic drug; Biomarkers; Cerebral ischaemia; Mechanical thrombectomy; Mortality; Prognosis; Thrombolysis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34865660 PMCID: PMC8647498 DOI: 10.1186/s42466-021-00161-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Pract ISSN: 2524-3489
Publications reporting the clinical efficacy and tolerability of antiseizure medication for treatment of post-stroke epilepsy
| Author | Study design | Participants (n) | Age (years) | Medication (mg) | Period | Seizure recurrence | Tolerability | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alvarez-Sabin et al. [ | Prospective Observational | 48 ischaemic 23 haemorrhagic | 63.9 | GBP 900–1800 mg | 30 months | 18% | Adverse events 38%; discontinued 3% | SN, NR, NP |
| Gilad et al. [ | Prospective Randomised | 64 ischaemic | LTG 67.2 CBZ 67.7 | LTG 25–200 mg CBZ 100–600 mg | 12 months | LTG 28% CBZ 56% | Discontinued LTG 3%, CBZ 31% | SN, NP, NDB |
| Kutlu et al. [ | Prospective Observational | 34 ischaemic | 69.8 | LEV 1000–2000 mg | 17.7 months | 18% | Discontinued 21%; stopped 3% | SN, NR, NP |
| Belcastro et al. [ | Prospective Observational | 35 ischaemic | 71.9 | LEV 1000–2000 mg | 18 months | 9% | Discontinued 11% | SN, NR, NP |
| Consoli et al. [ | Prospective Randomised | 79 ischaemic 27 haemorrhagic | LEV 74.1 CBZ 54 | LEV 52 CBZ 54 | 13,5 months | LEV 6% CBZ 15% | Discontinued LEV 33%, CBZ 39% | SN, NP, NDB |
| Tanaka and Ihara [ | Retrospective Observational | 69 ischaemic 43 haemorrhagic | 72.3 | 23 VPA, 22 PHT 15 CBZ | 12 months | VPA 48% PHT 18% CBZ 13% | – | SN, mono- and polytherapy |
| Huang et al. [ | Retrospective Observational | 1729 ischaemic 1893 haemorrhagic | 60.3 | PHT 2507 VPA 712 CBZ 157 Newer ASM 246 | 100 person - months | PHT 1.05% (ER visits) VPA 0.7% CBZ 0.4% Newer ASM 0.38% | – | Seizure in first 3 months excluded |
| Sales et al. [ | Retrospective Observational | 76 PSE 1590 EPI* | PSE 63 EPI 61.4 | ESL/PSE 887 ESL/EPI 983 | 12 months | 51.4% 68.3% | Adverse events 36% versus 35.8% | Multicentric, differences between cohorts |
Publications reporting the clinical effectiveness and tolerance for anticonvulsants used for the treatment of PSE, modified after Tanaka and Ihara [117]. Abbreviations: ASM: anti-seizure medication, CBZ: carbamazepine, EPI: epilepsy not associated with stroke (* with differences in age, length of preceding epilepsy treatment), ER: emergency room, ESL: eslicarbazepine, GBP: gabapentin, LEV: levetiracetam, LTG: lamotrigine, NDB: not double-blind, NP: no placebo, NR: non-randomised, PHT: phenytoin, PSE: post-stroke epilepsy, SN: small number of patients; VPA: valproate
Fig. 1Risk-based therapeutic strategy for post-stroke seizures (PSS). AED: anti-epileptic drug, ICH: intracerebral haemorrhage, IS: ischaemic stroke, HT: haemorrhagic transformation, PSE: post-stroke epilepsy, SAH: subarachnoid haemorrhage, SE: status epilepticus, Sz: seizure. Figure adapted from Zelano J. 47, Ther Adv Neurol Disord 9(5) pp 424–435, copyright © 2016 The Author. Reprinted by permission of SAGE Publications
Studies reporting risk factors for post-stroke seizures after thrombolysis or mechanical thrombectomy
| Author | Research subject | Patients | Results | Risk factors (independent) | Method characteristics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alemany et al. [ | mechanical thrombectomy; ASS and PSE | 344 patients with ischaemic stroke and NIHSS > 8 treated with thrombectomy | 21 (6.1%) presented ASS, The accumulated PSE incidence at 5 years was 8.93%; rt-PA not an independent risk factor for ASS | for ASS: degree of reperfusion: OR 2.02 | 1 centre, retrospective, observation period > / = 5 years |
| Alvarez et al. [ | rt-PA and PSS prognosis | 28 of 2,327 patients had PSS (1.2%) | Worse outcome in rt-PA and PSS versus rt-PA without PSS | for ASS: Cortical involvement: OR 7.5, rt-PA: OR 4.6 | PSS < 7 days, mostly < 72 h, 1 centre, 3-month period |
| Bentes et al. [ | rt-PA versus no thrombolysis | 101 patients rt-PA; 50 no rt-PA | Seizure symptoms during rt-PA infusion 5% ( | – | Observation period 1 year, 1 centre |
| Brigo et al. [ | rt-PA effect on seizure development < 7 days | 79 patients | rt-PA OR 2.26 | for ASS: Cortical localization: OR 2.49; i.v. rt-PA: OR: 2.26 | 1 centre, period: weeks |
| Brondani et al. [ | rt-PA, PSE influence on prognosis | 153 patients, rt-PA 13 patients | 7% PSS, 9% PSE | for PSE: hemorrhagic transformation: OR = 3.55, mRS > / = 2 at 3 months after stroke: OR: 5.82 | 1 centre, observation period at least 2 years |
| Castro-Apolo et al. [ | rt-PA versus no thrombolysis | 42 patients with seizures, 62 without | 33 early seizures, late seizures in 66.7%; no association with rt-PA ( | PSE worsens outcome | 1 centre, mean observation period 20 months |
| De Reuck et al. [ | rt-PA versus anticoagulant | 38 patients rt-PA 269 patients OAC 769 patients antithrombotic | ASS increase as a correlate of reperfusion, partial reduction of late seizures | ASS associated with stroke severity | Cardiogenic or atherothrombotic ischaemic stroke only, 1 centre |
| Gasparini et al. [ | rt-PA versus mechanical thrombectomy | 26,055 patients (meta-analysis) | 1800 (7%) PSE | for PSE: Cortical lesions: OR 3.58, hemorrhagic component: OR: 2.47, ASS: OR: 4.88, younger age at stroke onset (difference in means: 2.97 years) | Multicentre meta-analysis Heterogeneous time periods |
| Keller et al. [ | rt-PA versus no thrombolysis; PSE | 302 patients | PSE incidence: 20.6% rt-PA versus 10.7% no rt-PA; no effect of rt-PA after adjustment for other variables | for PSE: low Barthel Index at discharge; hemianopia; infection acquired during the hospital stay; involvement of the temporal lobe; involvement of the perirolandic cortex | 1 centre, 42-month period (max. 80 months) |
| Lekoubou et al. [ | rt-PA versus mechanical thrombectomy; PSS | 13,753 patients (meta-analysis) | 529 PSS with rt-PA (6.1%), PSE 6.7%, ASS 3.14% | Pooled OR: rt-RA und PSS 1.24 (not significant), no difference PSE regarding rt-PA or mechanical thrombectomy | multicentre meta-analysis |
| Naylor [ | rt-PA versus IAT versus IAT + rt-PA (PSS) | 363patients rt-PA: PSE 5.8% 1375 patients, stroke unit only | PSS: IAT 12.9% rt-PA + IAT 4.5% 2% PSE | for PSE rt-PA: OR 3.7 IAT: OR 5.5 rt-PA + IAT: OR 3.4 | multicentric, 2-year period |
| Nesselroth et al. [ | rt-PA versus antiaggregation | rt-PA 141 patients rt-PA + antiaggregation 141 patients antiaggregation only 95 patients | PSS: rt-PA 8.1% antiaggregation 12.6% rt-PA + antiaggregation 5.8% | rt-PA reduces PSS risk by 6% | 1 centre, 1-year period |
| Tan et al. [ | rt-PA versus no thrombolysis | 177 patients rt-PA 158 patients no rt-PA | PSE: 8.25% rt-PA, no rt-PA 6.5%; no significant effect of rt-PA on PSE risk | PSE worsens functional prognosis | 2-year period with phone interview, 1 centre |
| Polymeris et al. [ | presence of ASS | 10,074 patients rt-PA | 1.5% ASS | seizures at onset not an independent predictor of outcome | Pooled data from 9 centres rt-PA with or without subsequent endovascular therapy Multicentre Various time periods |
| Zöllner et al. [ | rt-PA versus mechanical thrombectomy; ASS | 13,356 patients with rt-PA and 1013 patients with rt-PA and mechanical thrombectomy | ASS: 1.5% (n = 199) with rt-PA versus 1.8% (n = 237) in controls without rt-PA 1.7% with rt-PA and mechanical thrombectomy versus 1.7% (each n = 17) in controls with rt-PA only | No difference in frequency of ASS between patients with rt-PA versus no recanalisation (historical cohort) or rt-PA and mechanical thrombectomy versus rt-PA only | Study matched for age, NIHSS and premorbid function level with population-based register data |
Studies of risk factors for seizure development following thrombolysis. aOR: adjusted odds ratio, ASS: acute symptomatic seizures, IAT, intra-arterial therapy, NIHSS: National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, OAC: oral anticoagulant, OR: odds ratio, PSE: post-stroke epilepsy, PSS: post-stroke epileptic seizure, rt-PA: recombinant plasminogen activator
Fig. 2Transfer of hydrogen protons and the resulting difference in water signal as an indicator of glutamate concentration using the GluCEST method [92]. Figure reproduced from Kogan et al. [92], Curr Radiol Rep 1 pp 102–114. Reprinted by permission from Springer Nature: Copyright © Springer 2013
Fig. 3Conventional structural MR images (T1- and T2-weighted imaging [T1WI/T2WI]) in the first and second column, diffusion-weighted image (DWI) in the third column, and amide proton transfer weighted imaging (APTW) in the fourth column from the left. Each row corresponds to images from an individual patient with acute ischaemic infarct and differing clinical reports [93]. Figure reproduced according to the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license from: Lin et al. [93]. Copyright © 2018 Lin, Zhuang, Shen, Xiao, Chen, Shen, Zong and Wu
Fig. 4Examples of blood–brain barrier permeability images using dynamic susceptibility contrast-enhanced perfusion-weighted imaging (DSC-PWI) showing the relative increase of BBB permeability in the area of ischemia compared to the corresponding area of the unaffected hemisphere (upper right image, respectively lower left image in (a, b)) [108]. Figure reproduced according to the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license from: Heidari et al. (2020). Copyright © 2020 Heidari, Blayney, Butler, Hitomi, Luby and Leigh