Brain Sciences (Jul 2020)

Ictal Asystole in Drug-Resistant Focal Epilepsy: Two Decades of Experience from an Epilepsy Monitoring Unit

  • Sara Casciato,
  • Pier Paolo Quarato,
  • Addolorata Mascia,
  • Alfredo D’Aniello,
  • Vincenzo Esposito,
  • Roberta Morace,
  • Luigi Pavone,
  • Carlo Di Bonaventura,
  • Mario Tombini,
  • Giovanni Assenza,
  • Giancarlo Di Gennaro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci10070443
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7
p. 443

Abstract

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Background: Ictal asystole (IA) is a rare event observed in people with epilepsy (PwE). Clinical and IA video-electroencephalographic findings may be helpful in screening for high-risk subjects. Methods: From all PwE undergoing video-EEG for presurgical evaluation between 2000 and 2019, we retrospectively selected those with at least one IA (R–R interval of ≥3 s during a seizure). Results: IA was detected in eight out of 1088 (0.73%) subjects (mean age: 30 years; mean epilepsy duration: 9.6 years). Four out of them had a history of atonic falls. No patients had cardiac risk factors or cardiovascular diseases. Seizure onset was temporal (n = 5), temporo-parietal (n = 1) or frontal (n = 2), left-sided and right-sided in five and two patients, respectively. In one case a bilateral temporal independent seizure onset was recorded. IA was recorded in 11 out of 18 seizures. Mean IA duration was 13 s while mean IA latency from seizure onset was 26.7 s. Symptoms related to IA were observed in all seizures. Conclusion: IA is a rare and self-limiting event often observed during video-EG in patients with a history of atonic loss of consciousness and/or tardive falls in the course of a typical seizure.

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