Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3050139 Epilepsy & Behavior 2010 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Past sexual trauma is frequently linked to the development of behavioral spells, present among 30% of patients admitted for video/EEG monitoring. Current attempts to verify and explore mechanisms in this reported association revealed that patients with epilepsy (n = 58) and those with behavioral spells (n = 38) did not differ in their self-report of past sexual trauma (among approximately 38% in each group). Ninety percent (90%) of men with behavioral spells endorsed past physical abuse, however, compared with 45% of men with epilepsy, and 40% of men with spells likely met current criteria for posttraumatic stress disorder. Among all patients, the presence of past physical, but not sexual, abuse positively predicted the diagnosis of spells rather than epilepsy. Current findings do not support a preponderance of sexual trauma in behavioral spells, yet within the subset of men with spells, greater exposure to physical abuse and current symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder may be important etiological and sustaining factors.

Research Highlights► Patients with behavioral spells and epilepsy reported equal rates of sexual abuse ► Men with behavioral spells reported more physical abuse than men with epilepsy ► Forty percent of men with behavioral spells endorsed current symptoms of PTSD ► Childhood physical abuse independently predicted the diagnosis of behavioral spells.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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