| HISTORICAL NOTE AND NOMENCLATURE
Reflex seizures of different types have been known for centuries. Recognition
of those induced by flashing light predates the invention of the EEG and
of the stroboscope and reaches to classical antiquity. The seizures induced
by stimuli in sensitive patients are not different from spontaneous seizures
in other subjects and thus reflex seizures are often classified according
to the stimuli that trigger them rather than by the type of seizure that
is triggered. Some earlier classifications and the publications on which
they were based described “simple” and “complex”
reflex epilepsies. The complex reflex epilepsies were characterized by
seizures triggered by relatively elaborate stimuli whose specific pattern
is the determining factor in seizure evocation. The seizures are precipitated
by integration of higher cortical function and may be evoked by anticipation
of the stimulus. Latency from stimulus onset to the clinical or EEG event
is typically longer than in “simple” reflex epilepsies. These
properties, enunciated in the 1985 proposal for classification of epilepsies
(Commission on Classification and Terminology of the International League
Against Epilepsy 1985), were first systematically described in the pioneering
work of Forster (Forster 1972). In a later classification proposal (Commission
on Classification and Terminology of the International League Against
Epilepsy 1989), some varieties were not accepted as epileptic syndromes,
partly because of the occurrence of spontaneous seizures in the same patients;
they were described as “epilepsies characterized by specific modes
of seizure precipitation”. The current proposal (Engel, 2001) upon
which this article is based, defines reflex epilepsy syndromes as those
“… in which all epileptic seizures are precipitated by sensory
stimuli. Reflex seizures that occur in focal and generalized epilepsy
syndromes that are also associated with spontaneous seizures, are listed
as seizure types”. Thus, few reflex epilepsy syndromes are recognized,
and are described in chapters AA-BB. The classification proposal also
includes a list of precipitating stimuli for reflex seizures, discussed
in this article. These are:
- Visual stimuli
- Flickering light - color to be specified when possible
- Patterns
- Other visual stimuli
- Thinking
- Praxis
- Reading
- Somatosensory
- Proprioceptive
- Eating
- Music
- Hot water
- Startle
It is important to note that the seizures which are triggered by these
stimuli in epileptic disorders that are not Epilepsy Syndromes in the
recent classification proposal do not differ from those triggered by the
same stimulus in recognized Epilepsy Syndromes. For example, seizures
triggered by flashing light in “Pure” photosensitive epilepsy
(See Chapter __) are indistinguishable from the photosensitive seizures
that occur in some patients with Juvenile Myoclonic Epilepsy (JME, Herpin-Janz
syndrome). It should also be emphasized that when reflex seizures occur
with focal epilepsy, reportedly normal imaging studies may be misleading;
subtle cortical dysplastic lesions may be missed unless special MRI techniques
are used or may be found only in a surgical pathology specimen (for an
example see Martinez et al., 2000).
MECHANISMS
Two types of animal model of reflex seizures are: the
study of irritative cortical lesions and their activation by specific
stimuli, and the study of naturally occurring reflex epilepsies or seizures
induced by specific sensory stimulation in genetically predisposed animals.
The first approach has been used since 1929, when Clementi induced convulsions
with intermittent photic stimulation after applying strychnine to the
visual cortex of dogs to make it hyperexcitable. Photic-induced seizures
could be triggered even if only a limited brain area were treated with
strychnine as long as it was applied to both occipital cortices. Strychninization
of other sensory cortices also produced focal irritative lesions that
could be induced to produce seizures with the appropriate afferent stimulus,
indicating a more general mechanism that does not depend on some specific
property of the visual cortex. The second experimental approach, the study
of naturally occurring or induced reflex seizures in genetically susceptible
animals, has been pursued in photosensitive epileptic chickens, rodents
susceptible to sound-induced convulsions, the E1 mouse sensitive to vestibular
stimulation, and the Mongolian gerbil sensitive to a variety of stimuli.
The only species, however, in which the reflex seizures and EEG findings
are similar to those in humans is the baboon Papio papio extensively studied
by Naquet and co-workers, although the light-induced epileptic discharges
in baboons occur in the frontorolandic area rather than in the occipital
lobe (reviewed by Menini and Silva-Barrat, 1998).
In humans, studies in subjects sensitive to flashing
light and to striped patterns have yielded important information about
reflex seizure triggering which also has direct implications for patient
care and for prevention of visually-induced seizures in daily life. These
findings (reviewed by Binnie and Wilkins, 1998; Zifkin and Kasteleijn-Nolst
Trenité, 2000) also have implications for our understanding of
what are now thought of as generalized epilepsies. They can also be applied
to other reflex epilepsies and seizures and may represent a common mechanism
of reflex seizure genesis. Recruitment of a “critical mass”
of epileptogenic cortex in response to the reflex seizure stimulus can
result in epileptiform EEG activity or a clinical seizure. This recruitment
can be understood as relatively direct in some, but in other cases may
involve the participation and interaction of several cortical areas or
of cortex and subcortical structures activated by the external trigger.
Other factors may have the opposite effect, reducing the amount of involved
cortex and the likelihood that a seizure will occur.
The model of human pattern-sensitive epilepsy is of special
interest because it shows that generalized clinical events and generalized
or bilateral EEG abnormalities can be activated by a specific functional
stimulation with a known localization. This electroclinical pattern is
found in many subjects with several types of reflex seizure triggers and
idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE), without neurologic deficit or evident
lesions on imaging and who are thus presumed to have diffuse cortical
hyperexcitability with a genetic component. Seizures induced by thinking,
by “praxis”, and some cases of reading epilepsy appear to
follow this model. Photosensitive occipital partial seizures also occur
in patients with IGE (Guerrini et al., 1995; see chapter XXX), and motor
activity can elicit seizures in nearly 50% of patients with JME (Matsuoka
et al., 2000; see chapter YYY), which is now classified under “Idiopathic
generalized epilepsies with variable phenotypes.” These and other
observations in both reflex and spontaneous epileptogenesis suggest that
the postulated diffuse cortical hyperexcitability in IGE is not necessarily
uniform: specific activities can activate specific cortical systems or
functional networks spread over several cortical regions in one or both
hemispheres and produce focal or regional discharges, or partial seizures,
which may generalize. This does not invalidate a diagnosis of underlying
generalized epilepsy but shows that the biological substrate of generalized
epilepsy can be complex. As predicted by Clementi’s model, focal
or regional brain lesions can also be associated with reflex seizure triggering
by appropriate stimuli. Such patients may also have spontaneous seizures,
and many have neurologic deficit and abnormal imaging.
It may be clinically useful to think of precipitating
stimuli for reflex seizures grouped according to their association with
clinically generalized or bilateral EEG abnormalities, or with focal EEG
abnormalities although this distinction does not constitute an element
of the current proposed classification. This is summarized in Tables 1
and 2.
TABLE 1
REGIONAL OR FUNCTIONAL REFLEX TRIGGERS IN PATIENTS WITH GENERALIZED EPILEPTIFORM
ACTIVITY (after Wolf, 1994)
| Typical Effective Stimuli |
Region or system subserving the trigger |
Clinical seizure type |
Environmental flicker, screen content |
Occipital cortex |
Photosensitivity |
| Striped patterns, screen content |
Occipital cortex (magnocellular system) |
Pattern sensitivity |
| Mental arithmetic, Block Design |
Parietal lobe (non-dominant or biparietal network for non-verbal
thought) |
Seizures induced by thinking |
| Typing, using a knife, “action programming” |
Non-dominant or biparietal network for non-verbal thought AND Rolandic
area(s) |
“Praxis” induction |
| Reading |
Temporoparietal L>R or bilateral |
Primary reading epilepsy |
TABLE 2: REGIONAL OR FUNCTIONAL REFLEX TRIGGERS IN PATIENTS
WITH UNDERLYING FOCAL EPILEPSY
Typical Effective Stimuli |
Region or system subserving the trigger |
Clinical seizure type |
Predominantly non-limbic: |
|
|
| Touching, rubbing, or pricking skin often with a well-defined trigger
zone, typically unilateral |
Primary or secondary somatosensory cortex |
Induction by somatosensory stimuli, “Rub epilepsy” |
Startle |
Gross or subtle perirolandic lesions |
Startle epilepsy |
| Eating, toothbrushing, other oral sensory stimuli |
Perisylvian lesions |
Seizures with eating, toothbrushing |
| Walking, movement of limb |
Postcentral or paracentral lesions |
Seizures with proprioceptive stimuli |
| Often limbic: |
|
|
| Eating, taste of food |
Temporal ± frontal limbic |
Seizures with eating |
| Recall of trigger thought |
Temporal limbic |
Seizures induced by experiential thought |
| Music |
Temporal limbic and non-limbic |
Musicogenic seizures |
Seizures triggered by visual stimuli
Seizures triggered by visual stimuli are seen in several epilepsy syndromes.
These include Idiopathic generalized epilepsies with variable phenotypes,
most typically with JME, Idiopathic photosensitive occipital lobe epilepsy,
“other” visual sensitive epilepsies, and the rarer progressive
myoclonus epilepsies. Similar attacks may be triggered transiently in
some metabolic encephalopathies such as alcohol withdrawal without requiring
a diagnosis of epilepsy. Seizure types are discussed in Chapter X and
the seizures of photosensitive occipital lobe epilepsy are discussed in
Chapter Y. The seizures triggered by flicker and pattern are similar and
can occur in some subjects with exposure to everyday visual stimuli. Patients
may also induce seizures with manoeuvres which produce flicker, or with
ocular movements. Self-induced visual-evoked seizures may be very difficult
to treat. The attacks may be pleasurable. Some patients who note a refractory
period after a reflex seizure will induce an attack to avoid a later one
at a less convenient or safe time. Thus, noncompliance is common. There
is clear secondary gain for some patients (Binnie 1988; Tassinari et al
1998). Some flashing colours, most commonly long wavelength red or red-cyan
flicker, are more effective than white flashes in triggering EEG abnormalities
(Shirakawa et al., 2001). This form of light sensitivity is not assessed
in routine EEG evaluations but is of clinical significance because of
the potency of these stimuli to trigger seizures in predisposed subjects
who are exposed to them in everyday life. Regulations in some countries
prohibit broadcasting certain types of patterned or flashing stimuli to
prevent seizures (see Chapter X).
Seizures induced by thinking
Seizures induced by thinking (Wilkins et al 1982; Goossens et al 1990,
Andermann et al., 1998) (“noögenic epilepsy”) occur in
response to nonverbal higher cortical function and have been reported
with a variety of stimuli, including arithmetic, drawing, playing cards
or chess, decision-making, and solving Rubik's cube. These seizures do
not typically appear to be activated by reading, writing, or by explicitly
verbal tasks, but about 80% of patients are found to have more than one
effective trigger. Seizures can be triggered in at least some of these
patients without any real or contemplated movement of the hands, e.g.,
by a task requiring a spoken answer to an orally presented arithmetic
or spatial problem. Unlike in primary reading epilepsy, most have spontaneous
seizures. The reflex and spontaneous attacks include bilateral myoclonus,
absences, and generalized tonic-clonic seizures and almost all reported
patients have had generalized convulsions. Often these begin after a period
of myoclonic jerks, but myoclonic jerks occurred without a following convulsion
in 76% of patients reviewed by Andermann et al. (1998) and 60% of patients
had absence seizures often associated with myoclonic jerks. Pure absence
epilepsy with seizures triggered by thinking was not seen, but not all
patients had myoclonus although some probably had JME. Myoclonic jerks
and absence attacks may be ignored or unreported until a generalized seizure
occurs and the patient then comes to medical attention. Seizures induced
by thinking usually occur in the context of a generalized epilepsy. Partial
seizures and clear focal EEG abnormalities have been reported but are
the exception. The essential component in the seizure trigger appears
to be nonverbal thought, the processing of numeric or spatial information,
and possibly sequential decision making.
Seizures induced by thinking are typically associated with both spontaneous
and evoked generalized or bilateral synchronous spike or multiple spike
and wave complexes. They may only appear after reduction of medications
in some patients. Although occasional patients have temporoparietal or
frontal spontaneous EEG abnormalities, typically over the right side,
these are at times mixed with generalized epileptiform activity. (Beaumanoir
et al 1989; Goossens et al 1990).
Praxis Induction
This term was introduced by Japanese authors who described seizures
triggered by thinking about “complicated spatial tasks in a sequential
fashion, [making] decisions, and practically responding by using a part
of [the] body” (Inoue, 2001). Writing is reported to be a major
precipitating factor (Inoue et al., 1994) although reading is not. Hand
or finger movements without “action-programming activity”
(defined as “higher mental activity requiring hand movement”
and apparently synonymous with praxis) are not effective triggers (Matsuoka
et al., 2000). Reflex upper limb myoclonus occurs, and may spread. This
pattern occurs almost exclusively in JME. It does not seem prominent in
patients with thinking-induced seizures who do not also have prominent
myoclonic reflex attacks. In its milder or most restricted forms, such
as the morning myoclonic jerk of the arm manipulating a utensil (Seino
M, personal communication, Bethel-Bielefeld 1999), this phenomenon resembles
cortical reflex myoclonus as part of a “continuum of epileptic activity
centered on the sensorimotor cortex” (Vignal et al., 1998). The
motor component, either imagined or performed, is crucial in praxis-induction
but other patients with seizures induced by thinking are activated by
tasks such as purely mental calculation of orally-presented arithmetic
tasks with no motor component in either the stimulus or the response.
The pattern of praxis-induction fits well with JME, in which there is
apparent regional hyperexcitability of sensorimotor cortex within an apparently
generalized epileptic disorder, (discussed by Wolf, 1994) and possibly
relevant morphologic abnormalities involving the motor system as well
(Woermann et al., 1998).
Seizures triggered by reading
Seizures of primary reading epilepsy are described and possible mechanisms
discussed in Chapter XX. Secondary reading epilepsy occurs in patients
with spontaneous seizures. Activation by reading or other language tasks
is found in both idiopathic and symptomatic epilepsies. Typically there
is no jaw jerking, and the baseline EEG is often abnormal. Language-induced
epilepsy involves seizure precipitation by speaking, reading, and writing
(Geschwind and Sherwin 1967). The seizures may be similar to those of
primary reading epilepsy, and some patients report only a single effective
trigger (e. g., recitation alone) (Herskowitz et al 1984). Activation
by reading and by other language tasks in the same patient can also occur
in symptomatic epilepsies, as recently illustrated (with video documentation)
by Canevini et al. (2001).
Language-induced epilepsy is not yet sufficiently well defined to warrant
classification as a separate syndrome independent of reading epilepsy.
Reported cases are more heterogeneous than those of primary reading epilepsy,
whose definition should perhaps be expanded to include them. Alternatively,
primary reading epilepsy could at some time be included as a variety of
a more broadly defined language-induced epilepsy as suggested by Koutroumanidis
and colleagues (Koutroumanidis et al 1998).
Seizures induced by somatosensory stimuli
Seizures induced by somatosensory stimulation are typically triggered
by tapping, rubbing, or pricking part of the body. A localized or regional
hypersensitive trigger zone can often be defined. The seizures begin with
sensory symptoms; a sensory jacksonian seizure occurs often followed by
tonic motor manifestations suggesting a supplementary motor area seizure.
Subsequent generalization may occur. Consciousness is preserved at least
at the onset. These typically occur in patients with postrolandic cortical
lesions which may be subtle. Normal MR imaging has been reported in such
patients with “rub” epilepsy but detailed imaging was not
described (Kanemoto et al., 2001). The authors grouped these seizures,
startle epilepsy, and seizures triggered by toothbrushing as “somatosensory
evoked reflex epilepsies.” This does not reflect current classification
but emphasizes the need to distinguish these patterns from each other.
Drugs for partial seizures are needed, but seizures may be intractable
and require evaluation for surgery.
Seizures induced by somatosensory stimuli must also be distinguished from
nonepileptic events. Confusion with startle epilepsy (Chapter __) is unlikely
if an adequate history is obtained.
Seizures induced by tapping, often by a single touch, also occur (“tap
epilepsy”, reviewed by Deonna, 1998). These are typically manifestations
of an idiopathic generalized epilepsy, rather than of the focal symptomatic
or cryptogenic process usual in the seizures induced by somatosensory
stimuli described above or of the severe static encephalopathy typical
of startle epilepsy. They consist of brief reflex generalized myoclonic
attacks associated with bilateral spike and wave EEG discharges and are
not remarkably different from the “Benign early infantile reflex
absence seizures” illustrated (with video recording) by Voskuil
(2002). These occur typically in normal infants and toddlers, and can
represent an idiopathic and relatively benign generalized myoclonic epilepsy
syndrome rather than a progressive myoclonic encephalopathy. These seizures
usually respond to valproate but may be self-limited. Prolonged treatment
may thus not be needed.
Seizures induced by proprioceptive stimulation
Reflex attacks apparently induced by movement were reported over 100
years ago (Gowers 1901). Although early reports described attacks apparently
induced by movement (Lishman et al., 1962), later work demonstrated the
paramount role of proprioceptive afferents (Chauvel and Lamarche 1975).
Thus, seizures originally described as movement-induced or gait-induced
are usually more accurately described as “proprioceptive-induced.”
These reflex seizures are rare, though well-described, and recently have
been reviewed by Vignal and colleagues (Vignal et al 1998). Reflex drop
attacks elicited by walking (Di Capua et al., 1989) are seen rarely in
patients with reflex interictal spikes evoked by percussion of the foot
(De Marco and Tassinari, 1981). We consider these to be a variety of seizures
induced by proprioceptive stimulation, interesting because, unexpectedly,
individuals with the interictal evoked spikes do not usually have such
attacks. This disorder likely represents a form of idiopathic localization-related
epilepsy of childhood, distinct because of the parietal lobe involvement.
Participation of a more elaborate network involved in motor programming
cannot be excluded in some cases especially if the effective stimulus
seems restricted to activities such as walking although “gait epilepsy”
(Iriarte et al., 2001) is not now a recognized seizure type or epilepsy
syndrome.
Proprioceptive-induced seizures are evoked by passive or active movement
without startle. The seizures are usually brief tonic seizures or simple
partial attacks induced by active or passive movement of a limb and usually
occur in subjects with fixed cerebral lesions and motor deficit. They
may begin with a jacksonian pattern of sensory manifestations. They have
been described as a transient phenomenon during nonketotic hyperglycemia,
resolving with metabolic correction (Brick et al 1989) and as self-induced
seizures with compulsive proprioceptive self-stimulation (Guerrini et
al 1992). The epileptic nature of these attacks has been confirmed by
ictal EEG recording (Arseni et al 1967).
Proprioceptive-induced seizures classically involve the rolandic sensorimotor
area of the hemisphere contralateral to the clinical seizure onset. Maximum
EEG electronegativity appears to be at the central vertex electrode in
a published EEG record of seizures induced by walking (Iriarte et al 2001).
The supplementary motor area may also be involved. This localization has
been confirmed by imaging and intensive monitoring. Cerebral lesions are
often evident and may have occurred well before the onset of attacks.
In cases with nonketotic hyperglycemia, an associated neurologic deficit
related to a remote lesion may be transiently unmasked during the period
of seizures (Brick et al 1989). Acute cerebral lesions or diffuse encephalopathies
may also be accompanied by self-limited proprioceptive-induced seizures.
Proprioceptive-induced seizures have been studied with a chronic alumina
focus in one foot area of the monkey brain. Reflex seizures were elicited
by stimuli that produced proprioceptive input to the hyperexcitable cortical
area. Seizures could not be elicited after curarization (Chauvel and Lamarche
1975). Transcortical reflex loops appear to be involved in generating
the proprioceptive-induced motor response in the cat with a penicillin
focus (Giovanni et al 1983). Human proprioceptive-induced seizures are
seen during nonketotic hyperglycemia, in which attacks are induced by
active or passive limb movement and more rarely with conjugate gaze (Brick
et al 1989; Duncan et al 1991). Many patients have fixed or transient
neurologic deficits, suggesting a mechanism similar to that described
for the monkey.
Proprioceptive-induced seizures should not be confused with startle epilepsy
(Chapter _). In subjects with gross cerebral damage, the nature and localization
of brain lesions are similar in the two syndromes, but the nature of the
triggering stimulus is quite different. Proprioceptive-induced seizures
begin less suddenly and may have initial jacksonian sensory manifestations.
Proprioceptive-induced seizures can usually be distinguished from paroxysmal
kinesigenic dystonia (choreoathetosis), characterized by dystonic and
choreoathetoid movements, preserved consciousness, and a normal EEG during
brief attacks which are rapidly induced by movement (Cler et al 1990).
Paroxysmal kinesigenic dystonia is often familial, begins in neurologically
normal children or young adults without evident lesions, and may be a
channelopathy (Bhatia 1999). Spontaneous improvement often occurs.
Acutely ill patients with these seizures require urgent investigation
for hyperglycemia and other encephalopathies. Seizures with nonketotic
hyperglycemia resolve with successful treatment of the hyperglycemia.
Recent or remote cerebral lesions often coexist with acute-onset proprioceptive-induced
seizures. CT or MRI studies are urgently indicated in all such patients.
Other patients with chronic proprioceptive-induced seizures require imaging
studies to localize any treatable lesion that may be responsible for the
attacks. Such lesions may be small, and detailed MRI may be needed. The
history will allow tailoring of the EEG investigation. Seizures can be
induced easily for study in the EEG laboratory, though reduction of medication
may be needed. If proprioceptive activation is suspected in drop attacks,
EEG monitoring of percussion of the sole of the foot with a reflex hammer
(Tassinari et al 1988) may be helpful. This easy and brief test is worth
performing in patients suspected of proprioceptive-induced seizures. Chronic
proprioceptive-induced seizures in medically stable patients are usually
manifestations of remote nonprogressive lesions as described above. As
in other patients with seizures, a progressive lesion such as tumor must
be excluded. Chronic (Rasmussen) encephalitis may also give rise to proprioceptive-induced
seizures.
Proprioceptive-induced seizures without acute illness are rare and their
prognosis unclear. There is no consensus as to their treatment. New onset
proprioceptive-induced seizures with acute cerebral lesions may cease
over days or weeks on their own and may require no specific treatment.
Carbamazepine would be a rational first choice if medication is needed
and clobazam (not available in the United States) may be added if necessary.
Surgery has been reported as effective, but there has been no published
series evaluating outcome in such patients (Falconer et al 1963).
Seizures induced by eating
Seizures induced by eating are characterized by seizures closely related
to one or several parts of eating. The clinical triggers of a seizure
are usually stereotyped for each patient, but patients may have some points
in common. Rare patients have seizures at the very sight or smell of food;
others may have them immediately after a heavy meal suggesting gastric
distension as a trigger in such cases (Gastaut and Poirier, 1964). Seizures
with eating are typically focal motor seizures, with or without auras
or automatisms of temporolimbic type, almost always related to a symptomatic
epilepsy. Seizures induced by eating are usually associated with localized
or regional EEG epileptiform activity either from temporolimbic structures
or from suprasylvian regions in association with larger lesions. EEG epileptiform
activity that is generalized from the start is rare.
Rémillard and associates suggested that patients with temporolimbic
seizures activated by eating have fewer spontaneous attacks and are more
likely to have such attacks from the onset of their epilepsy than are
patients with extralimbic, usually suprasylvian, seizure onset who have
less constant activation by eating. Patients with suprasylvian seizure
onset usually have more obvious extratemporal structural lesions and possible
activation by specific thalamocortical afferents (Rémillard et
al 1998). They may also have seizures with other forms of buccal stimulation
such as tooth brushing or kissing. Koutroumanidis et al (2001) reported
a case of adult-onset sensitivity to toohbrushing only, with normal imaging
and interictal left frontal epileptiform activity and suggested that this
was a cryptogenic reflex epilepsy.
Many patients with eating epilepsy have seizures that can be activated
only by obvious combinations of stimuli (Fiol et al 1986), and alerting
stimuli have been reported to abolish attacks (Ganga et al 1988), providing
at least circumstantial evidence for involvement of an increasing cortical
mass and of subcortical influences, which may promote or inhibit seizure
occurrence in some cases of reflex epilepsy. It appears that localization
of seizure onset and the nature of the seizure trigger are related in
these attacks. Patients with suprasylvian lesions may be triggered by
other oral activities and may represent a particularly noticeable type
of seizure induced by proprioceptive or by somatosensory stimulation.
They may be different from patients with temporolimbic-onset seizures,
in whom taste and autonomic afferents may play a more important role,
and in some of whom seizures may also be related to emotional or autonomic
components of eating or to gastric distension, with possible participation
of limbic and autonomic afferents.
A prevalence of approximately 1 per 1000 to 2000 epileptic patients
has been reported (Vizioli 1962; Nagaraja and Chand 1984). The unusually
high figures reported for Sri Lanka (Senanayake 1990) seem related to
an idiosyncratic definition and to ascertainment methods.
It is our impression that patients with eating epilepsy and extralimbic
seizure onset are more sensitive to either somatosensory or proprioceptive
stimuli during eating and are more likely to report that seizure induction
can be prevented by altering the sensory characteristics of their food.
Some will drink through a straw rather than from a cup or avoid biting
into a whole fruit by cutting it into small pieces. Stimulus alteration
can reduce seizure frequency in what can otherwise be an intractable or
socially disabling condition. Some patients take advantage of a refractory
postictal period by inducing a seizure to avoid a later attack in an embarrassing
setting. Drugs effective for partial seizures are necessary but medically
intractable cases should be recognized early and assessed for surgical
treatment.
Seizures triggered by music
Musicogenic epilepsy is characterized by seizures induced by hearing
certain sounds, typically music (Critchley, 1977). Seizures have also
been reported while the subject is exposed to the musical trigger during
sleep or while merely thinking about it. The effective stimulus can be
stereotyped for each patient and at times is exquisitely specific, but
with no clear common pattern between patients. An affective component
of the stimulus is evident in some patients, yet nonmusical sounds, such
as whirring machinery, can be effective triggers in others. The seizures
are of simple or complex partial type, with interictal and ictal epileptiform
activity recorded from either temporal region (Scott, 1977), usually the
right. Most patients also have spontaneous seizures and reflex seizures
often begin over a year after the onset of spontaneous attacks (Wieser,
1997).
The pathophysiology of musicogenic epilepsy is frustratingly obscure.
A conditioned response has been suggested to explain some cases of seizure
induction by music (Shaw and Hill 1947), but this view is not now generally
accepted (Forster 1972). Wieser and colleagues (1997) suggest a right
temporal predominance and documented right anterior and mesial hyperperfusion
during ictal SPECT as did Genc et al (2001). No depth electrode or electrocorticographic
details have been published. Chronic temporal lobe depth electrode studies
in epileptic subjects without musicogenic epilepsy suggest different lateralizations
for different components of a musical stimulus (Wieser and Mazzola 1986).
Creutzfeldt and Ojemann confirmed that musical stimuli may have widespread
effects on neuronal activity in human temporal lobes extending well beyond
the rather restricted primary auditory area (Creutzfeldt and Ojemann 1989;
Liegeois-Chauvel et al 1991), that different components of music have
different effects possibly with specialized lateralization and localization,
and that the effects of music are different from those of speech. PET
studies in patients and others (reviewed by Johnsrude et al., 2002) show
predominant involvement of right hemisphere structures in networks involved
in processing musical information, extending well beyond the classical
auditory cortex of Heschl’s gyrus. Studies in subjects with musical
hallucinations show that the primary auditory cortex is not “a sufficient
substrate for higher-order pattern perception” (Griffiths, 2000).
The primate auditory cortex is considered to consist of a central core
of primary cortex which receives thalamic projections and which is linked
to several “belt” areas. Primary cortex has multiple tonotopically
organized sections and is especially sensitive to pure tones. Belt regions
show more sensitivity to complex stimuli and are less tonotopically organized
(reviewed by Johnsrude et al., 2002). Zifkin and Zatorre also note that
more complex musical processing tasks activate more cortical and subcortical
territory bilaterally but with right hemisphere predominance (Zifkin and
Zatorre , 1998). Thus, hyperexcitable cortical areas could be stimulated
to different degrees and extents by different musical stimuli in patients
sensitive to musical triggers. Gloor (1990) suggested that responses to
limbic stimulation in epileptic subjects depend on widespread neuronal
matrices linked through connections which have become strengthened through
repeated use, of interest in considering the delay from seizure onset
to the development of sensitivity to music.
Seizures triggered by hot water
Seizures triggered by exposure to hot water are rare and until recently
most cases were reported from India where attacks occurred during ritual
bathing which involves pouring hot water over the head from a jug. Hot
baths have also been implicated. Partial seizures occur, which may generalize.
Differential diagnosis includes startle events, syncope, and febrile seizures.
Many cases have been self-limited and appear to represent situation-related
seizures akin to benign febrile seizures (Satishchandra et al., 1998)
and while the outcome is often benign, some patients later develop more
typical temporal lobe seizures. Some patients report pleasurable feelings
with these events and self-induction has been reported. Initial treatment
is by reducing the water temperature. More recent reports (Ioos et al.,
2000; Bebek et al., 2001) report onset from infancy to adult life and
spontaneous seizures in 62% of patients in whom onset was after infancy.
Interictal EEG abnormalities have been recorded over temporal areas in
half of patients. Imaging has reportedly been unremarkable.
Startle seizures
These are discussed in Chapter __.
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