Neurological Research and Practice (Nov 2022)

Teaching distinguishing semiological features improves diagnostic accuracy of seizure-like events by emergency physicians

  • Wenke Grönheit,
  • Vanessa Behrens,
  • Tatjana Liakina,
  • Christoph Kellinghaus,
  • Soheyl Noachtar,
  • Stoyan Popkirov,
  • Tim Wehner,
  • Eva Brammen,
  • Jörg Wellmer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s42466-022-00220-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Misdiagnosis of seizure-like events (SLE) in emergency situations is common. Here, we evaluate whether a single, video-based lesson highlighting distinguishing semiological features can improve the diagnostic accuracy of emergency physicians for epileptic seizures (ES), psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) and syncopes (SY). Methods 40 emergency physicians (24 anesthetists, nine surgeons and seven internal medicine specialists by primary specialty) participated in a prospective trial on the diagnostic accuracy of SLE. They assessed video-displayed SLE at two time points: before and after a lecture on distinguishing semiological features. In the lecture, semiological features were demonstrated using patient videos, some were acted by the instructor in addition. The increase in correct diagnoses and recognition of distinguishing semiological features were analyzed. Results Before the lesson, 45% of 200 SLE-ratings were correct: 15% of SY (n = 40), 30% of PNES (n = 40), 59% of ES (n = 120, focal to bilateral tonic–clonic seizures (FBTCS) 87.5% (n = 40), focal impaired aware seizures (FIAS) 45% (n = 80)). Semiology teaching increased both the rate of correct diagnoses of SLE to overall 79% (p 0.8). Conclusions A single 45-min video-based lesson highlighting distinguishing semiological features improves the diagnostic accuracy of ES, PNES and SY by emergency physicians. We expect that including this aspect into the curriculum of emergency physicians will lead to better individual patient treatment in pre-hospital medicine and more appropriate subsequent use of clinical resources.

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