Epilepsy and Behavior Case Reports (Jan 2014)

Cardiac arrest associated with epileptic seizures: A case report with simultaneous EEG and ECG

  • Jafar Mehvari,
  • Fatemeh Fadaie,
  • Shirin Omidi,
  • Mohammadmehran Poorsina,
  • Masoumeh Najafi Ziarani,
  • Marzieh Gharekhani,
  • Nahid Beladimoghadam,
  • Elham Rahimian,
  • Houshang Moein,
  • Majid Barakatain,
  • Mohammad Basiratnia,
  • Seyed Sohrab Hashemi Fesharaki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebcr.2014.07.001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. C
pp. 145 – 151

Abstract

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Ictal asystole is a rare, probably underestimated manifestation of epileptic seizures whose pathophysiology is still debated. This report describes two patients who had cardiac asystole at the end of their seizure. The first patient was a 13-year-old boy with complex partial seizures.. His MRI showed symmetrical signal abnormality in the bilateral parietooccipital lobe accompanied by mild gliosis and volume loss. During a 3-day long-term video-EEG monitoring, he had cardiac arrest at the end of one of his seizures that was secondarily generalized. The second one was a 42-year-old veteran with penetrating head trauma in the left frontal lobe due to shell injury. During long-term video-EEG monitoring, he had one generalized tonic–clonic seizure accompanied by bradycardia and cardiac asystole. Asystoles could have a role in the incidence of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), meaning that the presence of ictal bradycardia is a risk factor for SUDEP. In cases of epileptic cardiac dysrhythmia, prolonged simultaneous EEG/ECG monitoring may be required. Cardiological investigation should be included in epilepsy management.

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