癫痫的光敏性。电生理和临床相关。

D G Kasteleijn-Nolst Trenité
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引用次数: 0

摘要

光敏是一种罕见的现象,通常或多或少是偶然发现的,在大约5%的癫痫患者中。其病理生理机制仍未完全解决,光敏性的临床意义也存在争议。关于这个主题的文献令人印象深刻,但主要是轶事。在这篇论文中,我们描述了对100名连续的光敏患者进行广泛和标准化的研究的结果,特别强调了临床病史,癫痫发作史和电生理结果。然后将这些数据与年龄和性别匹配的对照组的相同数据进行比较,这些数据来自转介到特殊(三级保健)癫痫诊所的同一群癫痫患者。在第一章,文献综述和光敏性作为“反射性癫痫”的一种特殊形式的讨论。在脑电图(EEG)记录中,对间歇性光刺激(IPS)的正常反应和异常反应进行了区分,并制定了真正光敏性的标准。讨论了脑电图检查中光敏现象的出现与日常生活中视觉性癫痫发作的关系。由于癫痫的自我诱导与光敏性有关,因此对光敏患者的这种自我诱导行为进行了广泛的审查,包括一份特殊的参考清单(见附录a)。光敏性作为癫痫的遗传标记和模型的综述结束了本章。第二章概述了本研究的目的。一些关于光敏性癫痫的一般观念在临床实践中被广泛接受,但没有太多的科学依据,即认为光敏性的发现等同于原发性全局性癫痫的诊断。此外,光敏性通常被认为是儿童和青少年时期由基因决定的良性癫痫,但当与自我诱导行为相关时,则被解释为精神不正常的迹象。这些概念是否有效以及光敏性是否是一种特殊的癫痫亚型仍未得到解决。因此,在这项研究中,我们着手回答以下问题:A.光敏性癫痫患者与非光敏性癫痫患者在临床病史,更具体地说,癫痫发作史和家族史方面是否不同?B.光敏程度,即光敏范围,是否能预测日常生活中视觉诱发癫痫发作的可能性?关于电视和黑白条纹的敏感性的详细实验室结果是否具有临床预测价值,例如,是否可以通过脑电图检查确定易患电视癫痫或模式诱发癫痫的患者?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Photosensitivity in epilepsy. Electrophysiological and clinical correlates.

Photosensitivity is a rare phenomenon found, often more or less accidentally, in approximately 5% of epileptic patients. Its pathophysiology still remains largely unsolved and the clinical significance of photosensitivity is controversial. The literature on the subject is impressive, yet predominantly anecdotal. In this thesis we describe the results of an extensive and standardized study of 100 consecutive photosensitive patients with special emphasis on the clinical history, the seizure history and the electrophysiological findings. These are then compared to identical data of an age and sex matched control group, obtained from the same population of epileptic patients, referred to a special (tertiary care) epilepsy clinic. In chapter I, the literature is reviewed and photosensitivity as a special form of "reflex epilepsy" is discussed. A distinction is made between normal and abnormal reactions on intermittent photic stimulation (IPS) during electroencephalographic (EEG) registrations and the criteria of true photosensitivity are formulated. The relation between the presence of photosensitivity during EEG examination and the occurrence of visually-induced epileptic seizures in daily life is discussed. As self-induction of seizures has been associated with photosensitivity, an extensive review, including a special reference list (see appendix A), is given concerning such self-inducing behaviour in photosensitive patients. A review of photosensitivity as a genetic marker and model of epilepsy concludes this chapter. In chapter II the aims of this study are outlined. Some general conceptions about photosensitive epilepsy have become widely accepted in clinical practice without much scientific support, i.e., the idea that the finding of photosensitivity is synonym with the diagnosis of primary generalized epilepsy. Furthermore, photosensitivity is generally believed to be a genetically determined, benign type of epilepsy in childhood and adolescence but when associated with self-inducing behaviour is interpreted as a sign of mental subnormality. Whether or not these conceptions are valid and whether photosensitivity is or is not a special subtype of epilepsy remains unsolved. In this study we thus set out to answer the following questions: A. Are photosensitive epileptic patients different from non-photosensitive patients with epilepsy, with respect to clinical history and, more specifically, to seizure history and family history for seizures? B. Is the degree of photosensitivity, established as photosensitivity range, predictive for the liability to visually-induced seizures in daily life? Are detailed laboratory findings concerning sensitivity to television and black-and-white striped patterns of clinically predictive value, e.g. can patients, liable to TV epilepsy or pattern-induced seizures, be identified by EEG investigations?

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