Title: Neuropsychology of Epilepsy
1Birmingham 2006
- Neuropsychology of Epilepsy
- Pam Thompson
- Department of Clinical Experimental Epilepsy,
- Institute of Neurology
- National Society for Epilepsy
2 Cognitive functions
- Attention
- Perception
- Memory
- Language
- Constructional skills
- Executive skills
working episodic semantic remote prospective proce
dural
3Two cerebral hemispheresleft verbal
right
visual/spatial
4?
Visual impairments
5?
spatial deficits dyslexia dyscalculia
6?
comprehension semantic event memory
7 Frontal lobes
- one third of brain
- rich connections to other regions
- still maturing into adolescence
- incomplete development in learning disability ?
- size competencies distinguish
- man from other mammals
- females from males ?
8 Frontal lobes
- attentional deficits
- sustaining
- focusing
- mental slowness
- impaired monitoring feedback
- mental inflexibility
- impaired judgement
- impaired insight
9 Neuropsychological Assessment
- systematic assessment of cognitive functions
- standardised tests
- comparisons between people
- same person over time
- range of functions
- attention
- memory
- language
- perception
- executive skills
10 Neuropsychological Assessment
- intellectual level
- Wechsler Intelligence Scales
- WAIS, WAIS-R,WAIS-III
- tap a range of functions
- long history
- large normative sample
- VIQ PIQ FSIQ
-
11 Neuropsychological Assessment
IQ population Classification
gt130 2 Very Superior
120-129 7 Superior
110-119 16 High Average
90-109 50 Average
80-89 16 Low Average
70-79 7 Borderline
lt69 2 Mentally Impaired
12 Neuropsychological Assessment
- assessing for deterioration
- educational occupational history
- NART
- 50 words of increasing difficulty
- all irregularly spelt
- chaos
- dough
- yacht
- sanguine
- fiduciary
-
13Memory assessmentepisodic
- conversations/instructions
- names
- studying for exams
- recognising new people
- routes
- spatial layouts
- personal events
14Memory assessmentepisodic
- Verbal Non-verbal (visual) tests
- Story Recall
- Mr Jack Stevens was killed yesterday when
his car exploded outside the police station in
Ballymena , County Antrim. He had been a sports
reporter for the Belfast Herald. Police are
treating his death as suspicious. - Verbal learning
- List 15 words presented 5 times
15Memory assessmentepisodic
16Everyday memory failures
- How frequently do you
- Forget where youve put things?
- Have to go back to check?
- Forget you were told something?
- Find a word on the tip of your tongue?
- Forget peoples names?
- Forget to take your tablets?
- Memory rating 0-3
17Measuring executive skills
- Cognitive estimates
- How fast do race horses gallop?
- Phonemic fluency
- Words beginning with letter s
- Digit Span
- Forwards backwards
- (Working memory)
18Measuring executive skillsTrail Making Test
1
? ? ? ? ?
? ? ?
? ?
? D
C
B
? ? A
? ? E
19Measuring executive skillsStroop Test
red blue green green blue red red red blue green
red blue green green blue red red red blue green
20Epilepsy cognitive impairments
- disordered brain function
- increased risk of cognitive problems
- seizure related
- direct/indirect
- drug related
- underlying brain damage
- important to identify as hidden
- school, work social functioning
21conversationscognitive demands
- perception recognise the person
- memoryplace the person, when you met them
last,personal details,what said last time - languageexpress self coherently,fluently
derive meaning from
what said - attentionlisten to content,non-verbal
cues,monitoring what said, turn taking - planninganticipate impact of what saying
- even more demanding with gt one person
22 Intelligence
- myth of low intelligence intellectual
deterioration
- statistics show that in two thirds of
epileptics the intellect and nervous system
suffer considerably . Failure of memory, partial
insanity and hopeless imbecility are frequently
part of the epileptic condition
- Textbook 1914
23 Intelligence
- demonstrated PWE span the entire spectrum of
intellectual ability - syndromes where arrest decline
- Lennox Gastaut
- Rasmussens Encephalitus
- Baltic Myoclonus
- Co-morbidity
- Downs Syndrome 10
- Autism 30
24 Transient cognitive disturbance
1.ictal deficits
- subclinical seizures
- transient cognitive impairment (TCI)
- simple partial seizures
déjà vu, jamais vu - overt seizures
expressive dysphasia, memory
disturbance
- non-convulsive status
- days weeks
- mental slowness,peudo-dementia
- pre post-ictal changes
25 subclinical seizures
- Sarah
- infant school teacher
- forgetting events days/week before
- problems following conversations
- routine ok childrens names lesson plans
- working memory impairment
- episodic memory with rehearsal intact
- ambulatory EEG
- 2 hr assessment 80 seizure activity
26unrecognised seizures
- LD presenting with challenging behaviour
- CPS 18 - 40/m
- 22 hours EEG recordings
- A number of frontal seizures with frontal
lobe semiology are recorded. There were further
sub-clinical features to indicate ictal
involvement of the R frontal lobe - The interictal EEG shows marked abnormalities
for much of the time,with frequent runs of
paroxysmal epileptiform discharges
27 ictal language disturbance
Brief to counsel 6. Fee to counsel for Mr X 7.
Attending hearing, respondents undertakings,
order made inter alia interim residence
granted 15 Dec 2002 court welfare officer
prepared 8.Since your last bedsprings Fain
look in the sight of Emu the Eel and slide on
the glide trying to water ski
28 ictal language disturbance
From the Outstanding from the Client aherleg
number From the Spotet owt of luggage the sped
or louggae spent a touring office spent
understand from a Swpent hair from Birthspring a
Hind Mister a Long haired long hearied before
lodging triumph walk belong hair outstanding,
walk ing long telephoned outstanding
outstretching out streched early walk from there
questing earlyoutstanding long outstanding
standing foooo. 9. Conference 40 mins
29 ictal memory disturbance
- Dr Z attending a patient when I felt the
onset of a petit mal. The next thing I recollect
I was at a desk talking to someone else - made a full physical examination
- arrived at the correct diagnosis
- recommended to the patient a course of treatment
- written up in the patient notes
30 ictal disturbance
- subclinical seizures
- transient cognitive impairment (TCI)
- overt seizures
expressive dysphasia,memory
disturbance
- non-convulsive status
prolonged attentional deficits
(absence status) mental slowness
pseudodementia (CPStatus) - pre post-ictal changes
31GRNon-convulsive status
32 Transient cognitive disturbance
2.medication
- research studies conflicting findings
controversial - marketing tool for drugs efficacy
- consensus cognitive impairment ? polytherapy
- all AEDs can cause cognitive impairment
- where cognitive change co-incides with medication
changes - adverse cognitive effects potentially reversible
33 AEDS Healthy Volunteers
DRUG PLACEBO PHTVPACBZCL
B PLACEBO DRUG
PHTVPACBZCLB
Days
1 14
28
Asst.1 Asst. 2
Asst. 3
34 Newer compounds
- Martin et al 1999 healthy volunteers
- 4 wks TPM,LTG,GBP
- TPM impaired attentionreduced verbal
fluency (50) - Salinsky et al 2004
- 12 wks OXC, PHT
- motor speed and RT slowed
- OXCPHT
- Mecarelli et al 2004
- 8 days CBZ, OXC, LEV
- neg effects CBZ gtOXCgtLEV
- Meador et al 2005
- neg effects TPM
35 PWE
- older compoundsadults
- adverse cognitive effects
- PBgtBZDsgtPHTgtCBZVPAgtLTG
- newer compounds
- TPMgtLEVGPTOXC
- children
- at risk group
- lack of conclusive findings
- Loring Meador 2004 review
36Test scores before,during following withdrawal
of TPM
37NTImpact of TPM on IQ
TPM TPM -
38Number of different AEDs Assessment Unit N30
MA (mg) CLZ 2 CBZ 1200 LEV 3000 LTG
600 ATZ 250 PHT 300
Number of AEDS
39 Inter-ictal deficits
- memory most frequently reported deficit
- confirmed by research
- temporal lobes
- most epileptogenic region
- very vulnerable- head injury
statusmeningitis - brain structures most involved with memory
- bilateral damage amnesia
- unilateral material specific deficits
-
-
40 Impact of deficits
- ? frequency warring for person family
- ? academic occupation performance
- social functioning
- erode confidence and reduce self-esteem
-
41 Memory
- Patricia 47years LHS
- bimonthly partial seizures
- I can cope with the seizures but my memory
problems do get me down and tend to aggravate
people as I tend to repeat myself a lot - How frequently do you?
- -forget you were told something yesterday or
a few - days ago and have to be reminded?
- -repeat to someone what you have already
told them?
42 Verbal Recall
- Mr Jack Stevens was killed yesterday when his
car exploded outside the police station in
Ballymena, County Antrim. He had been a sports
reporter for the Belfast Herald. Police are
treating his death as suspicious.
43 Verbal Recall
-
- Right TLE Mr Jack Stevens died when his car
exploded by the police station in Ballymena ,
County Antrim. He had been a journalist for a
Belfast newspaper. His death was being treated as
suspicious. -
- Left TLE about a man..something about a
bomb..did he die?.
44RTLEFigure Recall
45Bilateral hippocampal sclerosis
- 28 years viral illness
- CPS GTCS
- gross difficulty forming new memories
- loss of past memories
- procedural memories intact
- ride a bicycle, play a guitar, talented
artist
46Bilateral hippocampal sclerosis
I often forget friends faces completely and
usually their names. I forget conversations and
events we shared last time we met,however recent
they are and however good or important they may
have been. This can cause misunderstanding,
irritation hurt If anyone wants to make
friends they must not be daunted by the hard work
it may appear to need.
47 Executive skills deficits
- frontal lobes second most epileptogenic brain
region - frequently damaged in head injuries
boxingdrop attacks - attentional deficits
- cognitive slowing
- impaired monitoring/feedback
- mental inflexibility
- reduced insight
- low motivation
-
-
48 Executive skills deficits
- EM 18yrs JME
- A levels Music Art
- IQ 125 Superior Ability
- verbally very articulate (1 to 1)
- difficulties in group settings
- impulsive
- limited insight
- poor planning organisational skills
- move away from home disastrous
- lost routine unable to develop one
49 Executive skills deficits EM JME
cognitive domain IQ Classification
word knowledge 125 Superior
verbal reasoning 139 Very Superior
spatial reasoning 135 Very Superior
visual analysis 131 Very Superior
naming 122 Superior
verbal memory 119 High Average
visual memory 134 Very Superior
50 Executive skills deficits EM JME
cognitive domain IQ Classification
executive skills
attention span 81 Low Average
mental flexibility
speed 100 Average
errors 75 Borderline Impaired
response suppression 65 Mentally Impaired
51 Cognitive Decline
- Electical status epilepticus during sleep ESES
- continuous paroxysmal discharges
- persists years onset 3-14 years
- CSWS frontal predominance
- Landau Kleffner Ltemporal predominance
- cognitive regression
- minority full recovery
- short durationlate onset
52 Cognitive Decline
- 19th century inevitable consequence
- frequent and severe seizures
- increased incidence of pre-senile dementia
- to explore predictive factors in at risk group
- to assess role of seizure frequency
- factor least well- studied
53 Cognitive decline
- studies in a variety of experimental models
have irrefutably demonstrated that repeated
seizures have extensive and profound long-term
effects in neural circuitry and provide no
reassurance that these effects can by casually
regarded as benign - Sutula
Pitkanen 2002 -
54 Cognitive decline
- studies in a variety of experimental
models have irrefutably demonstrated that
repeated seizures have extensive and profound
long-term effects in neural circuitry and provide
no reassurance that these effects can by casually
regarded as benign Sutula
Pitkanen 2002 - evidence in humans has been more difficult
to define or quantify.In the past indeed several
authorities have doubted that damage is prominent
or clinically relevant - Shorvon
2002 -
55 Cognitive decline
- N136
- AO 8 yrs Duration 35 yrs
- 92 partial epilepsy
- 6 TCS 52 CPS (median per yr)
- assessment I 31 yrs II 44years
- interval range 10 to 25yrs
56 Cognitive decline
- Intellectual level
- actual WAIS-R potential NART
- Memory
- verbal learning
- Naming
- Executive skills
- trail making
- fluency
57 Change in performance
IQ Verbal Verbal Naming Fluency
Trails Learning Recall
58 Cognitive decline
- cognitive decline was severe
- across all cognitive domains
- GTCS most potent predictor
- CPS,status remission for memory executive
skills - seizures adverse impact
- episodes remission cognitive beneficial
-
59Neuropsychology of epilepsy
EEG ABNORMALITIES
AEDs
COGNITIVEIMPAIRMENT
PATHOLOGY
MOOD
SEIZURES