SEIZURE The International Journal of the British Epilepsy &so&ion
INDEX TO VOLUME
7, 1998
W. B. SAUNDERS COMPANY LTD London Philadelphia Sydney Tokyo Toronto
NUMBER
VOLUME 7 1 FEBRUARY
1998
Obituary Professor Peter Jeavons (OPO) Original articles Epilepsy and learning disabilities-a challenge for the next millennium? Jean A. Hannah & Martin J. Brodie Amnesia in temporal Sallie Baxendale
lobectomy
patients: Historical
perspective and revi
Treatment of epilepsy following rejection of epilepsy surgery Peter Wolf Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy: clinical characteristics, treatment in a Norwegian population of patients Grethe Kleveland & Bernt A. Engelsen
and progn
Interictal quantitative EEG in epilepsy Miles E. Drake, Hosi Padamadan & Sharon A. Newell Clinical observations of juvenile myoclonic epilepsy in 131 patients: A study in South India J.M.K. Murthy, Ch. Mohan Rao & A.K. Meena Epilepsy, cerebral calcifications and clinical or subclinical Course and follow up with gluten-free diet Miguel A. Hernandez, Gema Colina & Luis Ortigosa
coeliac disease
Gabapentin add-on therapy with adaptable dosages in 610 patients with partial epilepsy: an open, observational study M. Baulac, D. Cavalcanti, E Semah, A. Arzimanoglou, J.J. Portal, The French Gabapentin Collaborative Group Misdiagnosis and treatment in juvenile myoclonic epilepsy Dilek Atakli, Dilsat Soztier, Turan Atay. Sevim Baybas & Baki Arpaci Case Report Episodic nocturnal wandering and complex visual hallucination. long-term follow-up Ying-Zu Huang & Nai-Shin Chu
A case 1
Abstracts Abstracts of posters presented at the International League Against Epilc (British Branch) Annual Scientific Meeting Oxford, October 1997
iv
VOLUME 7 NUMBER 2 APRIL 1998
Original articles Serum prolactin levels are elevated also after pseudo-epileptic Jorgen Alving
seizures 85
Electrophysiologic assessment of autonomic function in epilepsy Miles E. Drake Jr, Jodie M. Andrews & Christina M. Castleberry Photosensitivity-Better Christopher J. Millett,
informing patients with epilepsy of their individual David R. Fish & Pamela J. Thompson
91 risk 97
Fear of seizures: An investigation and treatment Imogen Newsom-Davis, Laura H. Goldstein & Declan Fitzpatrick
101
Seizure recurrence and risk factors after withdrawal of chronic antiepileptic therapy in children Benign0 E. Caviedes & Jose L. Herranz
107
Neuroimaging of children with partial seizures Uri Kramer, Yoram Nevo, Irit Reider-Groswasser, Yael Leitner, Aviva Phatal & Shaul Hare1
115
Eyal Sheuer, Jan J. Meyer,
Ecomonic analysis of epilepsy treatment: A cost minimization comparing carbamazepine and lamotrigine in the UK A. Shakespeare & G. Simeon
analysis 119
Prescribing of anti-epileptic drugs in the northern and Yorkshire region: 1992-1995 Sarah J. Roberts, Morgan Feely & D. Nicholas Bateman
127
Knowledge, attitudes and practice of epilepsy: experience at a comprehensive rural health services project Parindra Desai, M. V. Padma, S. Jain & M. C. Maheshwari
133
Epilepsies among twins born in families of Indian probands with epilepsy S. Jain, Menka S. Jain, M. V. Padma,A. Puri, F! Sen 8c M. C. Maheshwari
139
Automatic detection of epileptiform A comparison of two algorithms M. Dtimpelmann & C. E. Elger
145
spikes in the electrocorticogram:
Clinical characteristics, seizure spread patterns and prognosis of seizures associated with a single small cerebral calcific CT lesion J. M. K. Murthy & V. Sreenivas Reddy
153
Cognitive effects of anticonvulsant monotherapy in elderly patients: a placebo-controlled study Carol L. Read, Linda J. Stephen, Iwona H. Stolarek, Audrey Paul, Gramae J. Sills & Martin J. Brodie
159
Case Report Lamotrigine toxicity secondary to sertraline Kenneth R. Kaufman & Robert Gemer
163
Hypothalamic hamartomas causing gelastic epilepsy: Two cases and a review of the literature N. Georgakoulias, C. Vize, A. Jenkins & E. Singounas
167
VOLUME
NUMBER
7
3 JUNE
1998
Editorial Epilepsy surgery: past, present and future Heinz Gregor Wieser
173
Short Communication Developments in UK service provision for people with epilepsy: The impact of the NHS Executive Letter 95/120 Stephen W. Brown & Philip Lee
185
Original articles Who cares for students with epilepsy in mainstream Judith H. Lanfear & Claire Rashid
189
education?
Eyelid myoclonia with absences: phenomenology in children Lindsey Kent, Alison Blake & William Whitehouse
193
Liverpool Seizure Severity Scale revisited Gus A. Baker, David F. Smith, Ann Jacoby, Julie A. Hayes & David W. Chadwick
201
An audit of topiramate Pamela Crawford
207
use in a general neurology clinic
Heart period variability during vagal nerve stimulation Amar B. Setty, Bradley V. Vaughn, Stephen R. Quint, K. R. Robertson John A. Messenheimer
& 213
Public awareness and attitudes towards epilepsy in the United Arab Emirates A. Bener, F. H. Al-Marzooqi & L. Sztriha
219
Neuropsychological patterns in pediatric epilepsy Jane Williams, May L. Griebel & Roscoe A. Dykman
223
Increases in mRNA levels for synapsin I but not synapsin II in the hippocampus of the rat kindling mode1 of epilepsy Kiyoshi Morimoto, Keiko Sato, Soichiro Sato, Shuji Suemaru, Toshiki Sato, Norihito Yamada & Toshiyuki Hayabara
229
Valproate-induced epileptic tonic status G. Capocchi, A. Balducci, M. Cecconi, M. A. Pelli, A. Picchiarelli, G. Silvestrelli & M. Zampolini
237
Clobazam in partial status epilepticus C. Corman, A. Guberman & 0. Benavente
243
Effects of flash frequency and repetition of intermittent on photoparoxysmal responses K. Topalkara, G. Alarcon & C. D. Binnie
photic stimulation 249
vi NUMBER
VOLUME 7 4 AUGUST
1998
Editorial The Gowers’ Prizes T. Betts
259
Original Articles Improvement of seizure control by psychological intractable epilepsies C. Schmid-Schdnbein
methods in patients with 261
Reading epilepsy: Report of five new cases and further considerations pathophysiology P Wolf,Th. Mayer & M. Reker
on the 271
The Yelandur study: a community-based approach to epilepsy in rural South India-epidemiological aspects K. S. Mani, Geeta Rangan, H. V. Srinivas. S. Kalyanasundaram, S. Narendran & A. K. Reddy
281
Sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Is carbamazepine P. L. Timmings
289
implicated?
Long-term follow-up study of vigabatrin in pretreated children with West syndrome H. Siemes, U. Brandl, H.-L. Spohr, S. Volger & B. Weschke
293
Factors associated with the employment epilepsy J. E. Chaplin, A. Wester & T. Tomson
299
problems of people with established
Driving and epilepsy in Sri Lanka S. L. Seneviratne, S. B. Gunatilake, A. A. D. N. W. Adhikari
& H. J. De Silva
305
An insight into children’s and adolescents’ experience of seizures and epilepsy E Galletti, A. Rinna & C. Acquafondata
309
The neurophysiological evaluation of nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy A. Oldani, M. Zucconi, S. Smirne & L. Fermi-Strambi
317
Psychiatric disorder and cognitive function in children with epilepsy in Kerala, South India R. Hackett, L. Hackett & I? Bhakta
321
Primary reading epilepsy A. D. Yalcin & H. Forta
325
The perceived rehabilitation needs of a hospital-based people with epilepsy J. E. Chaplin, A. Wester & T. Tomson
outpatient
sample of 329
Case Report Postictal hemifacial purpura J. J. Reis & P W. Kaplan
337
Symptomatic nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy A. Oldani, L. Ferini-Strambi & M. Zucconi
341
NUMBER
VOLUME 7 5 OCTOBER
vii 1998
Original Articles A computational quantitative structure-activity relationship study of carbamate anticonvulsants using quantum pharmacological methods J. L. Knight & D. E Weaver
347
The incidence of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) Dublin and Wicklow Y. Langan, N. Nolan & M. Hutchinson
355
in South
Effects of gabapentin on cognition and quality of life in patients with epilepsy C. Mortimore, M. Trimble & E. Emmers
359
Non-epileptic attack disorder and clinical outcome: a pilot study H. Riaz, S. Comish, L. Lawton & B. Scheepers
365
Clinical courses of pure sleep epilepsies S. A. Park, B. I. Lee, S. C. Park, S. J. Lee, W. J. Kim, J. H. Lee & J. Y. Kim
369
The outcome of prescribing novel anticonvulsants factors affecting response to medication R. D. Thijs & M. P. Kerr
379
in an outpatient
setting:
Improved health care resource utilization following video-EEG-confirmed diagnosis of nonepileptic psychogenic seizures R.C. Martin, E G. Gilliam, M. Kilgore, E. Faught & R. Kuzniecky Subjective perception of seizure precipitants: J. Spatt, G. Langbauer & B. Mamoli
results of a questionnaire
385 study 391
Prevalence of photoparoxysmal response among South Indian epilepsy patients K. Radhakrishnan, S. D. Nayak,V. S. Nandini & A. Venugopal
397
The misdiagnosis of epilepsy: findings of a population B. Scheepers, P. Clough & C. Pickles
403
study
A note on a phrase in Shakespeare’s play “King Lear”: ‘A plague upon your epileptic visage’ T. Betts & H. Betts
407
John Hall and his epileptic patients-epilepsy century England T. Betts & H. Betts
411
Case Reports Treatment of seizures in acute intermittent gabapentin M. Zadra, R. Grandi, L. C. Erli, D. Mirabile
management
porphyria:
in early 17th
safety and efficacy of
& A. Brambilla
Adjunctive therapy in epilepsy with new antiepileptic C. E. Selai & M. R. Trimble
415
drugs: is it of any value? 417
Sudden death in two patients with epilepsy and the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) R. Kloster, H. C. Borresen & P. Hoff-Olsen
419
Abstract Abstracts of papers and posters presented at ‘Epilepsy 1998The Leading Edge’ annual scientific meeting of the British Branch of the International League against Epilepsy, Oxford, October 1998
421
. .. VIII
NUMBER
VOLUME 7 6 DECEMBER
1998
Original Articles Epilepsy needs revisited: a revised epilepsy needs document for the UK S. Brown, T. Betts, I? Crawford, B. Hall, S. Sharvon & S. Wallace
435
Patient views on primary care services for epilepsy and areas where additional professional knowledge would be welcome B. Chappell & W. H. Smithson
447
Confidentiality and the management of patients with epilepsy who fail to comply with doctor’s advice not to drive: a survey of medical/legal opions in Australia R. G. Beran
459
A follow-up study of adults with learning disabilities and epilepsy D. Branford, S. Bhaumik, E Duncan & R. A. Collacott
469
Epilepsy in adults with learning disabilities D. Branford, S. Bhaumik & E Duncan
473
Exacerbation of epileptic seizures by carbamazepine: A. Parmeggiani, E. Fraticelli & P G. Rossi
report of 10 cases 479
Idiopathic generalized epilepsy of late onset J. Loiseau,A. Crespel, M-C Picot, B. DuchC, N. Ayrivie, P Jallon & P Loiseau
485
An audit of children referred with suspected epilepsy R. Appleton, E Besag, C. Kennedy, S. Wallace & A. Hopkins
489
Neuroimaging abnormalities in Indian patients with uncontrolled partial seizures R. K. Garg, B. Karak & A. M. Kar
497
Epilepsy classification and factors associated with control in Saudi adult patients M. Abduljabbar, A. Ogunniyi, A. Daif, A. Al-Tahan, M. Al-Bunyan & S. Al-Rajeh
501
Intraoperative electrocorticography and successful focus resection in a case of Sturge-Weber syndrome D. Hata, T. Isu, M. Nakanishi & T. Tanaka
505
Midazolam via the intranasal route: an effective rescue medication severe epilepsy in adults with a learning disability M. Scheepers, B. Scheepers & P Clough
509
for
Therapeutic strategies against epilepsy in Mediterranean countries: a report from an international collaborative survey M. Baldy-Moulinier, A. Covanis, S. D’Urso, E. Eskazan, C. Fattore, G. Gatti, J. L. Herranz, S. Ibrahim,A. Khalifa, A. Mrabet, M. Y. Neufeld & E. Perucca Index to Volume 7,1998
513
Author VOLUME
Index
7
Abduljabbar, M. 501 Acombl, B. 427 Acquafondatal, C. 309 Adcockl, J.E. 79 Adhikari, A.A.D.N.W. 305 Al-Ansari, I. 426 Al-Bunyan, M. 501 Al-Marzooqi, F.H. 2 19 Al-Rajeh, S. 501 Al-Tahan, A. 501 Alarcon, G. 249 Alfat, F. 422 Allen, P 80 Alving, J. 85 Amin, D. 81 Andrews, J.M. 91 Appleton, R. 427,489 Arpaci, B. 63 Arzimanoglou, A. 55 Asherson, P. 429 Atakli, D. 63 Atay, T. 63 Ayrivit, N. 485
Bradford, J. 81 Brady, M. 79 Brambilla, A. 415 Brandl, U. 293 Branford, D. 469,473 Brodie, M.J. 3, 159 Brotherstone, R. 73 Brown, J.K. 73, 74 Brown, S. 435 Brown, S.W. 185 Burkitt, E. 77 Capocchi, G. 237 Castleberry, C.M. 91 Cavalcanti, D. 55 Caviedes, B.E. 107 Cecconi, M. 237 Chadwick, D.W. 201,422 Chaplin, J.E. 299, 329 Chappell, B. 447 Chioza, B. 429 Chu, N.-S.. Clayton, C. 428 Clough, P. 403,509 Colina, G. Collacott, R.A. 469 Comish, S. 365 Corman, C. 243 Covanis, A. 5 13 Craig, J.J. 76, 421 Crawford, P. 76, 207,435 Crespel, A. 485 Cm-ran, N. 429
Baddeley, L. 75 Baker, A. 81 Baker, G.A. 201 Balducci, A. 237 Baldy-Moulinier, M. 5 13 Bartolo, R. 427 Bateman, D.N. 127 Baulac, M. 55 Baxendale, S.A. 15,424 Baybas, S. 63 Beime, M. 427 Benavente, 0.243 Bener, A. 219 Beran, R.G. 459 Besag, F. 489 Besser, R. 426 Betts, H. 8 1, 82,407,4 11 Betts, T. 76, 79, 81, 82,407, 411,422, 423,424, 425, 435 Bhakta, P 321 Bhaumik, S. 469,473 Binnie, C.D. 8 1,249 Blake, A. 193 Boniface, S. 8 1 Borresen, H.C. 419 Bowery, N.G. 77
D’Urso, S. 5 13 Dai, H. 505 Daif, A. 501 Datta, P. 76 Davies, R.A. 78 De Silva, H.J. 305 Deadwyler, S. 428 Desai, P 133 Drake, M.E. 39,91 DuchC, B. 485 Diimpelmann, M. 145 Duncan, E 469,473 Duncan, J.S. 77 Duthie, T. 77 Dykman, R.A. 223 Edson, A. 426 ix
X
Elger, C.E. 145 Elian, M. 82 Ellis, N. 424 Emmers, E. 359 Engelsen, B.A. 3 1 Erli, L.C. 415 Eskazan. E. 5 13 Fairgrieve, S. 422 Fattore, C. 5 13 Faught, E. 385 Feely, M. 127 Fenwick, P.B.C. 78,79 Fermi-Strambi, L. 3 17,341 Fish, D. 80, 81, 97 Fitzpatrick, D. 10 1 Forta, H. 325 Fox, C. 422,423,425 Fraticelli, E. 479 French Gabapentin Collaborative Group, 55 Galletti, F. 309 Garg, R.K. 497 Gatti, G. 5 13 Georgakoulias, N. 167 Gemer, R. 163 Gilliam, F.G. 385 Glazier, S. 428 Goldstein, L.H. 101 Gouzeva, V.I. 73 Grandi, R. 415 Green, A. 75 Griebel, M.L. 223 Grigorenko, E. 428 Guberman, A. 243 Gunatilake, S.B. 305 Hackett, L. 321 Hackett, R. 321 Hagan, R. 428 Hall, B. 435 Hand, K.S.P. 77 Hanna, J. 428 Hannah, J.A. 3 Harding, G. 76,426 Hardman, M. 79 Harel, S. 115 Hayabara, T. 229 Hayes, J.A. 201 Hayward, B. 425 Hemindez, M.A. 49 Herranz, J.L. 107,5 13 Hoff-Olsen, P 419 Hopkins, A. 489 Howes, L. 79,425 Huang, Y.-Z. 67
Hutchinson, M. 355 Ibrahim, S. 513 Jackson, M.J. 422 Jackson, V, 79,425 Jacoby, A. 201 Jain, M.S. 139 Jain, S. 133, 139 Jallon, P. 485 Jarvie, S. 77 Jenkins, A. 167 Jonas, P. 422 Kalyanasundaram, S. 28 1 Kaplan, PW. 337 Kar, A.M. 497 Karak, B. 497 Kaufman, K.R. 163 Kennedy, C. 489 Kennett, R. 79 Kent, H. 77 Kent, L. 193 Kerr, M. 379,425 Khalifa, A. 5 13 Kilgore, M. 385 Kim, J.Y. 369 Kim, W.J. 369 Kittler, J. 428 Kleveland, G. 3 1 Kloster, R. 419 Knight, J.L. 347 Koepp, M.J. 77 Kramer, U. 115 Kuzniecky, R. 385 Kyle, G. 422 Lanfear, J. 189 Langan, Y. 355 Langbauer, G. 39 1 Lawton, L. 365 Leach, J.P. 422 Lee, B.I. 369 Lee, J.H. 369 Lee, P. 185 Lee, S.J. 369 Leitner, Y. 115 Lemieux, L. 80 Lindsay, M. 82 Linevich, V.V. 73 Loiseau, J. 485 Loiseau, P 485 Luxon, L.M. 78 Lynch, S. 422 Maheshwari, M.C. 133, 139 Makoff, A. 429 Mamoli, B. 391
Index
xi
Mani, K.S. 281 Martin, R.C. 385 Masanori, N. 505 Mawer, G. 423 Mayer, Th. 27 1 McWilliam, R.C. 428 Meena, A.K. 43 Messenheimer, J.A. 2 13 Meyer, J.J. 115 Millett, C.J. 97 Mirabile, D. 415 Mohan Rao, Ch. 43 Molyneux, A.J. 77 Morgan, A. 425 Morimoto, K. 229 Morrison, P. 421 Morrow, J.I. 76,42 1 Mortimore, C. 359 Mrabet, A. 5 13 Murthy, J.M.K. 43, 153 Nandini, V.S. 397 Narendran, S. 28 1 Nashef, L. 428,429 Nayak, S.D. 397 Neufeld, M.Y. 5 13 Nevo, Y. 115 Newell, S.A. 39 Newsom-Davis, I. 101 Noble, M. 80 Nolan, N. 355 O’Regan, M.E. 73,74 Ogunniyi, A. 501 Oldani, A. 317, 341 Ortigosa, L. Oxbury, J.M. 77,79 Oxbury,
S. 77
Padamadan,H. 39 Padma,M.V. 133, 139 Park, S.A. 369 Park, S.C. 369 Parmeggiani,A. 479 Parsons,L. 42 1 Patten, C. 428 Patterson,V.H. 421 Paul, A. 159 Pelli, M.A. 237 Pendleton, E. 75 Perucca, E. 5 13 Phatal, A. 115 Picchiarelli, A. 237 Pickles, C. 403 Picot, M.-C. 485 Polizzi, G. 80
Portal, J.J. 55 Pouretemad,H.R. 78 Preece,M. 75 Pm-i.A. 139 Quint, S.R. 213 Radhakrishnan,K. 397 Rangan,G. 281 Rao, P.422 Rashid,C. 189 Read,C.L. 159 Reddy, A.K. 281 Reddy, V.S. 153 Reider-Groswasser,I. 115 Reis, J.J. 337 Reker, M. 27 1 Riaz, H. 365 Richardson,M.P. 77 Rinna, A. 309 Roberts, S.J. 127 Robertson,K.R. 213 Rogers,D. 427 Ross,C. 74 Rossi,PG. 479 Russell,A.J.C. 76,421,428 Salisbury, H. 78 Sander,J. 423 Sato, K. 229 Sato, S. 229 Sato, T. 229 Savundra, PA. 78 Scheepers,B. 365,403,509 Scheepers,M. 509 Schmid-Schonbein,C. 261 Schmitt, EC. 426 Scott, C.A. 80 Seddon,H. 75 Selai, C.E. 417 Semah,F. 55 Sen, P 139 Seneviratne, S.L. 305 Setty, A.B. 213 Shakespeare,A. 119 Sheuer,E. 115 Shorvon, S. 429,435 Siemes,H. 293 Sills, G.J. 159 Silvestrelli, G. 237 Simeon, G. 119 Singounas,E. 167 Smime, S. 3 17 Smith, D. 427 Smith, D.F. 201 Smith, K. 423 Smith, P.424
xii
Smith, S. 81 Smith, S.J.M. 80 Smithson, W.H. 447 SCiziier,D. 63 Spatt, J. 391 Spohr, H.-L. 293 Squier, W. 78 Sreeram,N. 74 Srinivas, H.V. 28 1 Stephen,L.J. 159 Stephenson,J.B.P. 428 Stolarek, I.H. 159 Stores,G. 74 Suemaru,S. 229 Symms, M.R. 429 Sztriha, L. 219 Tatsuya, T. 505 Tedman,B. 427 Thijs, R.D. 379 Thompson, PJ. 78, 97,424 Timmings, PL. 289 Tokohiko, I. 505 Tomson,T. 299,329 Topalkara, K. 249 Trimble, M. 359,417 Trower, M. 428 Upton, D. 424
Vaughn, B.V. 213 Venugopal, A. 397 Vize, C. 167 Volger, S. 293 Walker, K. 74 Wallace, D. 428 Wallace, S. 435,489 Weaver, D.F. 347 Weschke,B. 293 Wester, A. 299, 329 White, K. 422 Whitehouse, W. 74, 75, 193,426 Wieser, H.G. 173 Wieshamnn,U.C. 429 Wiggs, L. 74 Wilkins, A.J. 81 Williams, J. 223 Wolf, P.25, 271 Wong, I. 423 Wright, G.D.S. 79 Yalcin, A.D. 325 Yamada, N. 229 Zadra, M. 415 Zaiwalla, Z. 79, 8 1 Zampolini, M. 237 Zeman, A. 426 Zucconi, M. 317,341
Subject VOLUME
Index
7
absence seizures juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 43 perioral myoclonia with, 426 acetylcholine receptor subunits, (r4 nicotinic, association studies of idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 429 achievement skills, childhood epilepsy, 223 acute intermittent porphyria, gabapentin, 415 adolescents, experience of epilepsy, 309 adverse drug reactions, post-marketing survey, 423 affective disorders, see depression alkaline phosphatase, monitoring on sodium valproate, 75 ammonia, monitoring on sodium valproate, 75 amnesia intra-carotid sodium amytal, 77 temporal lobectomy, 15,424 transient epileptic, 426 amygdala kindling model, synapsin I vs synapsin II, mRNA, 229 anoxic seizures, cardiac pacing for, 74 antidiuretic hormone, see syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion antiepileptic drugs on cognitive function, elderly patients, 159 and learning disabilities, 3 pregnancy, register, 76,42 1 after rejection of surgery, 25 use in Mediterranean countries, 5 13 withdrawal from children, recurrence of seizures, 107 anxiety, see seizure phobia aromatherapy, 79 arrhythmias, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 289 artefacts, functional MRI and EEG, 80 association studies, idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 429 attention, childhood epilepsy, 223 attitude to epilepsy, United Arab Emirates, 219 audits appropriateness of EEG requests, 427 children as new patients, 489 epilepsy services, 75 lamotrigine as first-line monotherapy, 424 rashes, 423 topiramate in neurology clinic, 207 autohypnosis, and conditioned odour memory, 79 automatic spike detection, electrocorticography, 145
autonomic function, 9 1 autoradiography, vs proton emission tomography, temporal lobe epilepsy, 77 autosomal dominant nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy, association studies, 429 beat-to-beat variations, heart rate, vagal nerve stimulation, 213 behaviour, evaluation, childhood epilepsy, 223 brain lesions, partial seizures, children, 115 brain stem inhibition, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 289 British Epilepsy Association, survey of NHS, 185 calcific lesions with coeliac disease, 49 computed tomography, seizures, 153,497 carbamates, structure-activity relationships, 347 carbamazepine exacerbation of seizures, 479 vs lamotrigine, costs, 119 reading’ epilepsy, 27 1 sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 289 SIADH, 419 carbon- 1 I-flumazenil proton emission tomography, vs hydrogen-3-flumazenil autoradiography, temporal lobe epilepsy, 77 cardiac pacing, for reflex anoxic seizures, 74 cardiac rhythm, vagal nerve stimulation, 213 cardiac syncope, misdiagnosis of epilepsy, 428 cardiorespiratory changes, epileptic seizures, 73 cDNA microarray hybridization, epileptic tissue, 428 cerebral calcifications with coeliac disease, 49 computed tomography, seizures, 153,497 charges for medication, non-epileptic seizures, 385 children, see also school nursing antiepileptic therapy withdrawal, recurrence of seizures, 107 differential diagnosis, 74 experience of epilepsy, 309 imaging, partial seizures, 115 neuropsychological patterns in childhood epilepsy, 223 new patients, audit, 489 choreoathetosis, paroxysmal dystonic, 427 circadian rhythm, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 43 classification of epilepsy, Saudi Arabia, 501 clinics, see also outpatients fast track, 425 .. .
x111
xiv
clobazam partial statusepilepticus, 243 quality of life, 417 coeliac disease,with cerebral calcifications, 49 cognitive-behaviour therapy, seizure phobia, 101 cognitive function, seealso learning disabilities antiepileptic drugs on, elderly patients, 159 carbamazepine-inducedseizures,479 childhood epilepsy, 223 developing countries, 32 1 gabapentinon, 359 calorimetry, intuitive, 8 1 community learning disability epilepsy nursespecialists, 3 computed tomography, calcific lesions,seizures, 153, 497 computer software, electrocorticography, automatic spike detection, 145 conditioned odour memory, on spike-wavedischarges, 79 confidentiality, driving, 459 corpus callosotomy, 177 costs carbamazepine,vs lamotrigine, 119 non-epileptic seizures,385 counter measures,self control techniques,261 cysticercosis,497 cystic lesions,partial seizures,India, 497 daytime video-EEG monitoring, 79 death, seesuddenunexpected death in epilepsy dentate gyrus, kindling, synapsin I vs synapsin II, mRNA, 229 depression and seizure phobia, 101 from topiramate, 207 developing countries, seealso India attitudes to epilepsy, 133 childhood epilepsy, psychiatric disordersand cognitive function, 321 epidemiology of epilepsy, 28 1 diagnosis,and learning disabilities, 3 diazepam, rectal, at school, 189 differential diagnosis,children, 74 diffusion weighted imaging, magneticresonanceimaging, 429 discrimination (employment), 299 DNA studies,epileptic tissue,428 doctors, views on driving and epilepsy, Sri Lanka, 305 dopamine antagonists, eyelid myoclonia with absences,193 driving confidentiality, 459 Sri Lanka, 305 drug rashes,seerashes drug resistance,and epilepsy surgery, 25
Dublin, incidence of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 355 dyslexia, and reading epilepsy, 27 1 dysphasicstatusepilepticus, 426 economics,epilepsy treatment, 119 education, seealso patient education; training studentswith epilepsy, 189 elderly patients, antiepileptic drugs on cognitive function, 159 electrocardiography, long QT syndrome vs epilepsy, 428 electrocorticography automatic spike detection, 145 surgery for Sturge-Weber syndrome, 505 electroencephalography carbamazepine-inducedabnormalities,479 with functional magnetic resonanceimaging, 80 interictal quantitative, 39 photoparoxysmal response,249 requests,audit of appropriateness,427 electrophoresis,transorbital, sodium oxibutirate, 73 Elizabethan medicine, 8 1, 82,407,411 employment, 299 epidemiology, seealso India developing countries, 28 1 epilepsy needsdocument, United Kingdom, 435 epilepsy surgery, seesurgery ethics, confidentiality and driving, 459 Executive Letter 95/l 20, National Health Service, 185 experience of epilepsy, children and adolescents,309 eyelid myoclonia with absences,193 families, effects of epilepsy, 424 famouspersons,and epilepsy, 82 fast days, and medication, 133 fast track clinics, 425 fear, seeseizure phobia felbamate, structure-activity relationships,347 first presentation,children, audit, 489 flash frequency, photoparoxysmal response,249 folic acid, vs neuraltube defectsfrom sodiumvalproate, 421 free medication, rural health services, 133 frontal lobe epilepsy, nocturnal, 3 17, 341 gabapentin acute intermittent porphyria, 415 cognitive function and quality of life, 359 open-label study, 55 outpatient response,379 post-marketing surveillance, 423 quality of life, 359, 417 vs topiramate, psychiatric effects, 207 Galenical medicine, 411 gating, sensorimotor,non-epileptic seizures,78 gelastic epilepsy, hamartomas,hypothalamus, 167
Index
generalized tonic-clonic seizures juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 43 in sleep, 369 general practice, see primary care genes, differential expression, epileptic tissue, 428 genetic factors, twin studies, 139 glucuronidation, lamotrigine, sertraline on, 163 glutamate receptors, association studies of idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 429 gluten-free diet, epilepsy in coeliac disease, 49 Hall, John (17th-century physician), 82,407 hamartomas, hypothalamus, gelastic epilepsy, 167 health authorities, prescribing rates, primary care, 127 health care resources fast-track one-stop clinics, 425 long-term management of non-epileptic seizures, 365 NHS Executive Letter 95/l 20, 185 non-epileptic seizures, 385 long-term management, 365 heart pacing for reflex anoxic seizures, 74 period variability, vagal nerve stimulation, 2 13 hemifacial purpura, postictal, 337 hemispherectomy, 177 hereditary factors, twin studies, 139 high density cDNA array hybridization, epileptic tissue, 428 hippocampus, memory deficits after surgery, 15 historical aspects, 8 1, 82,407,411 sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 428 temporal lobectomy, 15 hot water epilepsy, Yelandur (South India), 28 1 hydrogen-3-flumazenil autoradiography, vs carbon- 1 lflumazenil PET, temporal lobe epilepsy, 77 hypnosis, and conditioned odour memory, 79 hypothalamus, hamartomas, gelastic epilepsy, 167 hypsarrhythmia, West syndrome, vigabatrin, 293 ictal dyslexia, 27 1 idiopathic generalized epilepsy late onset, 485 twin studies, 429 imaging, partial seizures, children, 115 India epidemiology, 28 1 imaging, partial seizures, 497 photoparoxysmal response, incidence, 397 rural health services, attitudes to epilepsy, 133 infantile spasms, West syndrome, vigabatrin, 293 information, see patient education intelligence, childhood epilepsy, 223 interictal electroencephalography, quantitative, 39 intermittent photic stimulation juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 427
xv photoparoxysmal response, 249 incidence in South India, 397 international comparison, attitudes to epilepsy, 219 intra-carotid sodium amytal, on memory, 77 intractable epilepsy India, 497 self control techniques, 261 intranasal midazolam, learning disabilities, 509 intuitive calorimetry, 8 1 investigation, and learning disabilities, 3 Ireland, incidence of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 355 jasmine oil massage, on spike-wave discharges, 79 Jeavons, P. (obituary), 1 job problems, 299 juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 3 1,43 levetiracetam, 423 misdiagnosis, 63 photosensitivity, 427 Kerala (South India), childhood epilepsy, psychiatric disorders and cognitive function, 321 kindling, rat hippocampus, synapsin I vs synapsin II, mRNA, 229 King Lear (Shakespeare), 8 1,407 knowledge of epilepsy, patients, 77 lactate, monitoring on sodium valproate, 75 lamotrigine vs carbamazepine, costs, 119 as first-line therapy, audit, 424 outpatient response, 379 on photosensitivity and pattern sensitivity, 76 post-marketing surveillance, 423 quality of life, 417 rashes, audit, 423 sertraline, interaction, 163 vs topiramate, psychiatric effects, 207 language skills, childhood epilepsy, 223 late onset, idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 485 learning disabilities, 3 intranasal midazolam, 509 treatment outcomes, 425,469,473 valproate, and status epilepticus, 237 West syndrome, vigabatrin, 293 legal medicine, confidentiality and driving, 459 Leicestershire, epilepsy and learning disabilities, 469, 473 levetiracetam, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 423 linear predictors, automatic spike detection software, 145 linear regression calculations, structure-activity relationships, carbamates, 347 Liverpool Seizure Severity Scale, 201 long QT syndrome, misdiagnosis of epilepsy, 428
xvi
long-term
management, non-epileptic health care resources, 365
seizures, and
magnetic resonance imaging diffusion weighted imaging, 429 functional, with EEG, 80 partial seizures children, 115 India, 497 mathematics, structure-activity relationships, carbamates, 347 measurement, Liverpool Seizure Severity Scale, 20 1 mechanics calculations, structure-activity relationships, carbamates, 347 medical students, training, 425 Mediterranean countries, prescribing strategies, 5 13 memory, see also amnesia childhood epilepsy, 223 intra-carotid sodium amytal, 77 mental retardation, see learning disabilities mesial temporal sclerosis, 78 metabotropic glutamate receptors type 7, association studies of idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 429 midazolam, intranasal, learning disabilities, 509 misdiagnosis epilepsy cardiac syncope, 428 incidence, 403 juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 63 mnestic factors, and intra-carotid sodium amytal, 77 molecular pharmacology, carbamates, 347 mortality, see sudden unexpected death in epilepsy motor skills, childhood epilepsy, 223 mRNA probes, epileptic tissue, 428 multiple subpial transection, 179 myoclonic jerks, 3 I,43 National Health Service Executive Letter 95/l 20, 185 Nazi occupation of Norway, 82 Needs I, revision, 435 neural tube defects, sodium valproate, folic acid vs, 42 1 neurology clinic, audit of use of topiramate, 207 neuropsychological patterns, childhood epilepsy, 223 new patients, children, audit, 489 nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, a4 subunits, association studies of idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 429 nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy, 317, 341 autosomal dominant, association studies, 429 nocturnal wandering, episodic, 67 non-epileptic seizures, see also pseudoseizures health care resources, long-term management, 365 misdiagnosis of epilepsy, 403 sensorimotor gating, 78 Northern England, antiepileptic drugs
pregnancy, 422 prescribing rates, 127 Norway, resistance to Nazi occupation, 82 nurse specialists learning disabilities, in community, 3 perceived needs for, 329 odour memory, conditioned, on spike-wave discharges, 79 one stop epilepsy clinics, 425 outcome measurement, Liverpool Seizure Severity Scale, 201 outpatients, response to novel anticonvulsants, 379 oxcarbazepine, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, SIADH, 419 oxibutirate, see sodium oxibutirate pacing, cardiac, for reflex anoxic seizures, 74 pallid syncope, cardiac pacing for, 74 paramedical workers, epidemiology, developing countries, 28 1 parasomnias, 67 paroxysmal dystonic choreoathetosis, 427 partial seizures imaging children, 115 India, 497 response to novel anticonvulsants, 379 sleep, 369 partial status epilepticus clobazam, 243 dysphasic, 426 patient education developing countries, 133 knowledge of epilepsy, 77 perceived needs, 329 primary care, 447 photosensitive epilepsy, 97 patient request, daytime video-EEG monitoring, 79 patient satisfaction long-term management of non-epileptic seizures, 365 novel anticonvulsants, 417 primary care, 447 patient selection, epilepsy surgery, 175 pattern recognition, automatic spike detection software, 145 pattern sensitivity, lamotrigine on, 76 perception of epilepsy, children and adolescents, 309 perioral myoclonia with absences, 426 phobias, 101 photoparoxysmal response incidence in South India, 397 intermittent photic stimulation, 249 photosensitivity juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 427 lamotrigine on, 76
index
patient education, 97 tinted glasses, 8 1 pock-marks, King Lear, 407 polypharmacy, 55 polysomnography,nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy,3 17, 341 porphyria, seeacute intermittent porphyria postictal hemifacial purpura, 337 potassiumchannels, see voltage-sensitive potassium channelgene precipitants for seizures,perception, 391 pre-conception counselling,422 pregnancy,antiepileptic drugs Northern England, 422 pre-conception counselling,422 register, 76, 42 1 prepulseinhibition, non-epileptic seizures,78 prescribing rates,primary care, 127 primary care patient satisfaction, 447 prescribing rates, 127 primary reading epilepsy, seereadingepilepsy prognosis,and learning disabilities, 3 prolactin, serum levels, pseudoseizuresvs epileptic seizures,85 proton emissiontomography, vs autoradiography,temporal lobe epilepsy, 77 pseudoseizures,seealso non-epileptic seizures vs epileptic seizures,prolactin serumlevels, 85 vestibular pathology, 78 psychiatric disorders childhood epilepsy, developing countries, 321 epilepsy responseto novel anticonvulsants,379 psychogenicseizures,seenon-epileptic seizures;pseudoseizures psychological disturbances and sleepdisorders,74 topiramate, 207 psychological evaluation childhood epilepsy, 223 temporal lobectomy, postoperative,424 psychological methods,seizure control, 261 psychological stress,epilepsy triggering, 391 psychologists,perceived,needsfor, 329 psychosis,topiramate, 207 psychosocialfactors on families, 424 intractable epilepsy,261 public awareness,epilepsy,United Arab Emirates,219 public opinion, driving, Sri Lanka, 305 purpura, postictal hemifacial, 337 quality of life gabapentin,359,417 novel anticonvulsants,417 quantitative interictal electroencephalography,39
xvii
quantitative structure-activity relationships, carbamates,347 quantum mechanics, structure-activity relationships, carbamates,347 rashes,lamotrigine, audit, 423 rat kindling model, hippocampus, synapsin I vs synapsinII, mRNA, 229 readingepilepsy, 27 1, 325 rectal diazepam learning disabilities, 509 at school, 189 recurrence of seizures, antiepileptic therapy withdrawal, children, 107 reflex anoxic seizures,cardiac pacing for, 74 register,antiepileptic drugs in pregnancy, 76,421 rehabilitation, perceived needs,329 requestsfor EEG, audit of appropriateness,427 respiratory changes,epileptic seizures,73 risk factors, antiepileptic therapy withdrawal from children, recurrenceof seizures,107 road traffic accidents,seedriving R-R interval measurementof parasympatheticfunction, 9 1 vagal nerve stimulation, 2 13 rule-basedsystems,automatic spike detection, 145 rural environment, perception of epilepsy triggering, 391 rural health services,developing countries, attitudes to epilepsy, 133 Saudi Arabia, classification and outcome of epilepsy, 501 scales,severity, Liverpool Seizure Severity Scale, 201 school nursing, epilepsy services,75, 189 seizure phobia, cognitive-behaviour therapy, 101 self control techniques,intractable epilepsy, 261 self-induction, eyelid myoclonia with absences,193 sensorimotorgating, non-epileptic seizures,78 sertraline,interaction with lamotrigine, 163 service provision, seehealth care resources seventeenthcentury, epilepsy treatment, 411 severity scales,Liverpool Seizure Severity Scale, 201 Shakespeare,W., seealso Hall, John King Lear, 8 1,407 single smallcerebral calcific CT lesions, 153 slapped-facesyndrome, 337 sleepdeprivation epilepsy triggering, 391 juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, 43 nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy, 3 17 sleepdisorders episodic nocturnal wandering, 67 and psychological disturbances,74 sleepepilepsy, clinical courses,369 smell memory, seeodour memory social workers, perceived needsfor, 329
. .. XVIII
sodium amytal, intra-carotid, on memory, 77 sodium oxibutirate, transorbital electrophoresis, 73 sodium valproate, see valproate somnambulism, 67 specialist nurses, learning disabilities, in community, 3 spectral analysis, interictal electroencephalography, 39 spike detection, computer software, electrocorticography, 145 spike-wave discharges, aromatherapy on, 79 Sri Lanka, driving, 305 standards of care, and perceived needs, 329 status epilepticus partial, clobazam, 243 and valproate, 237 stress, epilepsy triggering, 39 1 structure-activity relationships, carbamates, 347 students with epilepsy, mainstream education, 189 study modules, medical education, 425 Sturge-Weber syndrome, surgery, 505 sudden unexpected death in epilepsy autonomic function, 9 1 carbamazepine, 289 historical aspects, 428 incidence, South Dublin and Wicklow, 355 syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion, 419 surgery and learning disabilities, 3 rejection of, 25 Sturge-Weber syndrome, 505 trends, 173 sympathetic skin responses, 9 1 synapsin I vs synapsin II. mRNA, rat hippocampus kindling model, 229 syncope cardiac, misdiagnosis of epilepsy, 428 pallid, cardiac pacing for, 74 syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 4 19 syphilis, and King Lear, 407 teachers, mainstream education, 189 temporal lobe, see mesial temporal sclerosis temporal lobectomy, 173 amnesia, 15,424 temporal lobe epilepsy carbon- 11-flumazenil PET, vs hydrogen-3flumazenil autoradiography, 77 monitoring before surgery, 79 vs transient global amnesia, 426 teratogenesis, see neural tube defects; pregnancy, antiepileptic drugs tinted glasses, on photosensitive epilepsy, 81 topiramate adverse effects, 76 audit, neurology clinic, 207 outpatient response, 379
Tourette’s
syndrome, vs eyelid myoclonia sences, 193
with ab-
training medical students, 425 school nurses, 75 transient epileptic amnesia, 426 transorbital electrophoresis, sodium oxibutirate, 73 triggers for seizures, perception, 391 twin studies, 139 idiopathic generalized epilepsy, 429 unemployment, 299 United Arab Emirates, attitudes to epilepsy, 2 19 United Kingdom, see also Northern England epilepsy needs document, 435 urban environment, perception of epilepsy triggering, 391 utilization of resources, non-epileptic seizures, 385 vagal nerve stimulation, heart period variability, 2 13 valproate biochemical monitoring, 75 neural tube defects, folic acid as protective, 421 reading epilepsy, 27 1 and status epilepticus, 237 withdrawal from children, recurrence of seizures, 107 vertigo, pseudoseizures, 78 vestibular pathology, pseudoseizures, 78 video-EEG monitoring daytime, 79 nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy, 3 17 videotelemetry, 79 resources, 80 vigabatrin with gabapentin, 55 outpatient response, 379 post-marketing surveillance, 423 quality of life, 417 visual field defects, 422 West syndrome, 293 visual field defects, vigabatrin, 422 visual hallucinations, complex, and episodic nocturnal wandering, 67 visual motor integration, childhood epilepsy, 223 voltage-sensitive potassium channel gene, association studies, 429 warning signs, recognising, 26 1 weather, epilepsy triggering, 391 West syndrome, vigabatrin, 293 Wicklow, incidence of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy, 355 Winchester geese, 407 work problems, 299 Yelandur (South India), epilepsy study, 281 Yorkshire, antiepileptic drug prescribing, 127