Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6013613 Epilepsy & Behavior 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Limbic encephalitis (LE) with waxing and waning neuropsychiatric manifestations including behavioral, personality, psychiatric, and memory changes can evolve over days to months. Many features of LE show remarkable overlap with the characteristics of mesial-temporal (limbic) status epilepticus (MTLSE or LSE). With LE, these prolonged impaired states are assumed not to be due to ongoing epileptic activity or MTLSE, because scalp EEGs usually show no epileptiform spike-wave activity; cycling behavioral and motor changes are attributed to LE; there may be little immediate improvement with antiepileptic drugs (AEDs); and of course, implanted electrodes are rarely used. Conversely, it is known that in pre-surgical patients with refractory limbic epilepsy, implanted electrodes have revealed limbic seizures that cannot be seen at the scalp. This paper assembles a chain of inferences to advance the proposition that refractory LE might represent LSE more often than is thought, and that implanted electrodes should be considered in some cases. We present two cases that suggest that LE was also LSE, one of which warranted implanted electrodes (case 1).

► Limbic encephalitis and status have protracted behavioral and psychiatric courses. ► EEG in either may show scalp rhythmic delta activity. ► Presurgical temporal epilepsy shows deep seizures on EEG, not seen at the scalp. ► Limbic encephalitis may be unsuspected status, warranting modified treatment.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
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