PSEUDOSEIZURES - 08/09/11
Resumen |
Distinguishing between nonepileptic attack disorder [pseudoseizures] and epilepsy can be very difficult and may need lengthy acquaintance with and study of the patient. The diagnosis should not be rushed, especially since many patients have both kinds of attack. Unfortunately repeated dramatic seizures are unnerving for both doctors and nurses and hasty treatment often takes precedence over careful observation.5
Pseudoseizures (also called nonepileptic, hysterical, or psychogenic seizures) are paroxysmal changes in behavior that resemble epileptic seizures, but are without organic cause and are without simultaneous electroencephalogram (EEG) changes suggestive of epilepsy. They include behaviors that resemble syncope and all types of seizures: generalized, complex partial, simple partial, absence, myoclonic, frontal lobe seizures, and apparent status epilepticus. In DSM–IV4 they are usually categorized as conversion disorder with seizures or convulsions, or in combination with other conversion symptoms as the mixed presentation subtype of conversion disorder.
Pseudoseizures are a somatic communication of mental distress, generally in response to a psychologic conflict or other stressors. Most pseudoseizures are conversion phenomenon or involve nonsomatic dissociative processes (such as trance states with amnesia or unresponsiveness). Some paroxysmal behaviors that are diagnosed as pseudoseizures are not conversion seizures, but are symptoms of other mental disorders such as panic episodes, cataplexy, or dissociative trance states that are mistaken for seizures.2
The diagnosis of pseudoseizures is often missed because the seizures are presumed to be epileptic. The consequences of misdiagnosis are considerable: delay of appropriate psychologic treatment, exposure to medication toxicity, unnecessary health care costs, and imposition of the stigma and lifestyle restrictions associated with epilepsy. Misdiagnosis contributes to pseudoseizures becoming chronic in two thirds of patients.10 Among tertiary care epilepsy center patients, the median delay between pseudoseizure onset and diagnosis is 3 to 10 years, and occasionally proper diagnosis may not occur for several decades.9, 27, 29 Consequently, the ineffective treatment of 49% to over 90% of pseudoseizure patients with anticonvulsant medications may last many years.24, 28
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| Address reprint requests to Elizabeth S. Bowman, MD, Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine, 541 Clinical Drive, Room 291, Indianapolis, IN 46202 |
Vol 21 - N° 3
P. 649-657 - septembre 1998 Regresar al númeroBienvenido a EM-consulte, la referencia de los profesionales de la salud.
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