Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5628493 | Epilepsy & Behavior Case Reports | 2017 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Cingulate epilepsy is a rare form of epilepsy. Seizures from the anterior cingulate may present with mood change, fear, hypermotor activity, and autonomic signs, while posterior cingulate seizures resemble temporal lobe seizures. We describe a child with cingulate epilepsy who experienced unpleasant/painful sensory phenomenon. The sensations were described as spiders crawling on his forehead/right leg, ladybugs causing right ear pain and bees stinging his head/right extremities. Unpleasant sensory phenomenon/pain are rarely reported in cingulate epilepsy. Recognizing the role of the cingulate in producing pain/unusual sensory phenomenon is important, and may have localizing value when evaluating children for epilepsy surgery.
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Authors
Robyn Whitney, Sameer AlMehmadi, Cristina Go, Ayako Ochi, Hiroshi Otsubo, Laura Bradbury, Kevin Jones, Eisha Christian, James Rutka, Bláthnaid McCoy,