In the field of neurology, seizure types are categories of seizures defined by seizure behavior, symptoms, and diagnostic tests. The International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) 2017 classification of seizures is the internationally recognized standard for identifying seizure types. [1] The ILAE 2017 classification of seizures is a revision of the prior ILAE 1981 classification of seizures. [2] Distinguishing between seizure types is important since different types of seizures may have different causes, outcomes, and treatments.
In ~2500 B.C., the Sumerians provided the first writings about seizures. [3] : 458 Later in ~1050 B.C., the Babylonian scholars developed the first seizure classification, inscribing their medical knowledge in the stone tablets called Sakikku or in English "All Diseases." [3] : 458 This early classification identified febrile seizures, absence seizures, generalized tonic-clonic seizures, focal seizures, impaired awareness seizures, and status epilepticus . [3] : 458 Samuel-Auguste Tissot (1728–1797) authored Traité de l’Epilepsie, a book describing grand état (generalized tonic-clonic seizures) and petit état (absence seizures). [3] : 460 Jean-Étienne Dominique Esquirol (1772–1840) later introduced grand mal (generalized tonic-clonic seizures) and petit mal to describe these seizures. [3] : 460 In 1937, Gibbs and Lennox introduced psychomotor seizures, seizures with "mental, emotional, motor, and autonomic phenomena." [4] Henri Gastaut led the effort to develop the ILAE 1969 classification of seizures based on clinical seizure type, electroencephalogram (EEG), anatomical substrate, etiology, and age of onset. [2] : 491 The ILAE 1981 classification of seizure included information from EEG-video seizure recordings, but excluded anatomical substrate, etiology, and age factors as these factors were "historical or speculative" rather than directly observed. [2] : 491 The ILAE 2017 classification of seizures closely reflects clinical practice, using observed seizure behavior and additional data to identify seizure types. [1] : 523
A seizure is a paroxysmal episode of symptoms or altered behavior arising from abnormal excessive or synchronous brain neuronal activity. [5] A focal onset seizure arises from a biological neural network within one cerebral hemisphere, while a generalized onset seizure arises from within the cerebral hemispheres rapidly involving both hemispheres. [1] : 526 Seizure symptoms, seizure behavior, neuroimaging, seizure etiology, EEG, and video recordings help distinguish focal from generalized onset seizures. [1] : 526 Unknown onset seizures occur if the available information is insufficient to distinguish focal from generalized onset seizures with a confidence. [1] : 524, 527 Focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizure indicates that the seizure begins as focal seizure then later evolves to a bilateral tonic-clonic seizure. [1] : 525
The classification distinguishes focal aware seizures from focal impaired awareness seizures. [1] : 524 Aware means aware of self and surroundings during the seizure, verified when a person can recall events having occurred during the seizure. [1] : 527 Impaired awareness occurs even if the recall of events is only partially impaired. [1] Impaired awareness may occur at any time during the seizure. [1] If the level of awareness cannot be determined, the level of awareness is unspecified; this usually occurs for atonic seizures and epileptic spasm seizures. [1] : 525
A motor seizure has prominent movement, increased muscle contraction, or decreased muscle contraction as the initial predominant seizure feature. [1]
Atonic seizures are a brief 0.5-2 second lapses in muscle tone commonly leading to a fall. [6] [ not specific enough to verify ]Epileptic spasm seizures are brief 1-2 second proximal limb and truncal flexion or extension movements, often repeated. [6] Hyperkinetic seizures occur as high amplitude truncal and limb movements such as pedaling, thrashing, and rocking movements. [6] Myoclonic seizures are brief jerks of limbs or body lasting milliseconds. [6] Tonic seizures are abrupt increases in muscle tone greater than 2 seconds in duration. [6] Clonic seizures occur as rhythmic body jerks. [6] Myoclonic-atonic seizures begins with one or more jerks (myoclonic phase) followed by a loss of muscle tone (atonic phase). [6] Myoclonic-tonic-clonic seizures begin with one or more jerks (myoclonic phase), then body stiffening (tonic-phase), then rhythmic jerks (clonic phase). [6] Tonic-clonic seizures begin as symmetrical bilateral body stiffening (tonic phase) followed by rhythmic jerks (clonic phase). [6] Myoclonic, atonic, tonic, and myoclonic-atonic seizures may cause abrupt falls, called drop attacks, similar to cataplexy. [6] Automatism seizures occur with repetitive stereotyped behaviors.
Type | Repeated stereotyped behaviors |
---|---|
Orofacial | lip smacking, chewing or swallowing movements |
Manual | hand tapping, fumbling, rubbing or picking movements |
Leg | walking, running, pacing |
Perseverative | pre-seizure behavior continues during the seizure |
Sexual | sexual behaviors |
Vocal | vocalizations |
Verbal | spoken words |
A non-motor seizure may begin with a sensory, cognitive, autonomic, or emotional symptom, behavioral arrest of activity, or impaired awareness with minor motor activity as the initial predominant seizure feature. [1]
Sensory seizures occur with somatosensory, olfactory, visual, gustatory, vestibular, or thermal sensations. [6] Cognitive seizures occur with language impairment (e.g. aphasia, dysphasia, anomia), memory impairments (deja vu, jamais vu), hallucinations, persistent thought (forced thinking), and neglect. [6] Autonomic seizures occur with palpitations, heart rate changes, nausea, vomiting, piloerection, lacrimation, pupil size changes or urge to urinate or defecate. [6] Emotional seizures occur with fear, anxiety, laughing, crying, pleasure, or anger sensations. [6] These initial symptoms are seizure auras. [6] Behavioral arrest seizures occur as an abrupt cessation of movement. [6]
Absence seizures occur with a sudden brief impairment in awareness, commonly less than 45 seconds. [6] Typical absence seizures may be accompanied by rhythmic facial 3 per second facial movements. [6] Atypical absence seizures occur with a less sudden impairment in awareness, often accompanied by a gradual head, limb, or truncal slumping. [6] Myoclonic absence seizures occur with myoclonic jerks of arms and shoulders. [6] Absence with eyelid myoclonia seizures occur with 4-6 per second eyelid myoclonic jerks and upward eye movement. [6]
Descriptors are additional seizure behaviors or symptoms that are appended to the seizure diagnosis. Descriptors may be a non-predominant or non-initial seizure feature. [1] Descriptors provide a more complete description of the seizure. [1]
Focal onset1 Motor onset
Non-motor onset.
| Generalized onset Motor onset
Non-motor onset (Absence)
| Unknown onset Motor onset
Non-motor onset
Unclassified |
1 - Classify focal seizures as focal aware, focal impaired awareness, or focal unspecified awareness. [1] : 525
During the typical 1 minute seizure, a person experiences a familiar (déjà vu) sensation, followed by picking and fumbling hand movements. After this seizure, the person cannot recall what was said during the seizure. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) shows left hippocampal sclerosis, a brain abnormality associated with focal seizures. [7] This is a focal impaired awareness cognitive seizure with déjà vu. Appending a descriptor, this is a focal impaired awareness cognitive seizure with déjà vu followed by hand automatisms.
During the typical 10 second seizure, a child abruptly stops and stares with 3 per second rhythmic eye fluttering movements. After the seizure, the child cannot recall what occurred during the seizure. An EEG test shows 3 per second spike-wave pattern, an EEG pattern indicating a generalized onset seizure. This generalized onset non-motor (absence) seizure is a typical absence seizure. Appending a descriptor, this is a typical absence seizure with 3 per second eye fluttering movements.
Dyscognitive, simple partial, complex partial, psychic, and secondarily generalized are terms that apply only to the ILAE 1981 classification of seizures. [1] : 525 The ILAE 2017 classification relies on intact awareness of self and surroundings, but the ILAE 1981 classification relies on intact consciousness, defined as a normal response to an external stimulus due to intact awareness and intact ability to respond. [2] : 493 [1] : 525 Unlike the ILAE 2017 classification, the ILAE 1981 classification specifies specific EEG patterns for each seizure type. [2] : 493–495
ILAE 2017 | ILAE 1981 |
---|---|
Focal seizure | Partial seizure |
Generalized seizure | Generalized seizure |
Focal aware seizure | Simple partial seizure |
Focal impaired awareness seizure | Complex partial seizure |
Non-motor seizure | Non-convulsive seizure |
Motor seizure | Convulsive seizure |
Cognitive seizure | Psychic seizure |
Emotional seizure | Affective seizure |
Focal to bilateral tonic-clonic seizure | Secondary generalized tonic-clonic seizure |
The associated EEG patterns are not included. [2] : 493
Partial seizures. [2] : 493
Generalized seizures. [2] : 493
Unclassified epileptic seizures
Status epilepticus is a seizure "lasting longer than 30 minutes or a series of seizures without return to the baseline level of alertness between seizures." [8]
Epilepsia partialis continua is a rare type of focal motor seizure, commonly involving the hands or face, which recurs with intervals of seconds or minutes, lasting for extended periods of days or years. [9] Common causes are strokes in adults, and focal cortical inflammation in children: Rasmussen's encephalitis, chronic viral infections, or autoimmune encephalitis. [9]
Subclinical seizures cause no symptoms and either no altered behavior or very minimal behavioral changes; the clinician recognizes these seizures as an evolving seizure pattern on an EEG recording. [10] [11]
Epilepsy is a group of non-communicable neurological disorders characterized by recurrent epileptic seizures. An epileptic seizure is the clinical manifestation of an abnormal, excessive, and synchronized electrical discharge in the brain cells called neurons. The occurrence of two or more unprovoked seizures defines epilepsy. The occurrence of just one seizure may warrant the definition in a more clinical usage where recurrence may be able to be prejudged. Epileptic seizures can vary from brief and nearly undetectable periods to long periods of vigorous shaking due to abnormal electrical activity in the brain. These episodes can result in physical injuries, either directly such as broken bones or through causing accidents. In epilepsy, seizures tend to recur and may have no immediate underlying cause. Isolated seizures that are provoked by a specific cause such as poisoning are not deemed to represent epilepsy. People with epilepsy may be treated differently in various areas of the world and experience varying degrees of social stigma due to the alarming nature of their symptoms.
An epileptic seizure, informally known as a seizure, is a period of symptoms due to abnormally excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain. Outward effects vary from uncontrolled shaking movements involving much of the body with loss of consciousness, to shaking movements involving only part of the body with variable levels of consciousness, to a subtle momentary loss of awareness. These episodes usually last less than two minutes and it takes some time to return to normal. Loss of bladder control may occur.
Absence seizures are one of several kinds of generalized seizures. In the past, absence epilepsy was referred to as "pyknolepsy," a term derived from the Greek word "pyknos," signifying "extremely frequent" or "grouped". These seizures are sometimes referred to as petit mal seizures ; however, usage of this terminology is no longer recommended. Absence seizures are characterized by a brief loss and return of consciousness, generally not followed by a period of lethargy. Absence seizures are most common in children. They affect both sides of the brain.
Lennox–Gastaut syndrome (LGS) is a complex, rare, and severe childhood-onset epilepsy syndrome. It is characterized by multiple and concurrent seizure types including tonic seizure, cognitive dysfunction, and slow spike waves on electroencephalogram (EEG), which are very abnormal. Typically, it presents in children aged 3–5 years and most of the time persists into adulthood with slight changes in the electroclinical phenotype. It has been associated with perinatal injuries, congenital infections, brain malformations, brain tumors, genetic disorders such as tuberous sclerosis and numerous gene mutations. Sometimes LGS is observed after infantile epileptic spasm syndrome. The prognosis for LGS is marked by a 5% mortality in childhood and persistent seizures into adulthood.
In the field of neurology, temporal lobe epilepsy is an enduring brain disorder that causes unprovoked seizures from the temporal lobe. Temporal lobe epilepsy is the most common type of focal onset epilepsy among adults. Seizure symptoms and behavior distinguish seizures arising from the medial temporal lobe from seizures arising from the lateral (neocortical) temporal lobe. Memory and psychiatric comorbidities may occur. Diagnosis relies on electroencephalographic (EEG) and neuroimaging studies. Anticonvulsant medications, epilepsy surgery and dietary treatments may improve seizure control.
Reflex seizures are epileptic seizures that are consistently induced by a specific stimulus or trigger making them distinct from other epileptic seizures, which are usually unprovoked. Reflex seizures are otherwise similar to unprovoked seizures and may be focal, generalized, myoclonic, or absence seizures. Epilepsy syndromes characterized by repeated reflex seizures are known as reflex epilepsies. Photosensitive seizures are often myoclonic, absence, or focal seizures in the occipital lobe, while musicogenic seizures are associated with focal seizures in the temporal lobe.
Idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE) is a group of epileptic disorders that are believed to have a strong underlying genetic basis. IGE is considered a subgroup of Genetic Generalized Epilepsy (GGE). Patients with an IGE subtype are typically otherwise normal and have no structural brain abnormalities. People also often have a family history of epilepsy and seem to have a genetically predisposed risk of seizures. IGE tends to manifest itself between early childhood and adolescence although it can be eventually diagnosed later. The genetic cause of some IGE types is known, though inheritance does not always follow a simple monogenic mechanism.
Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME), also known as Janz syndrome or impulsive petit mal, is a form of hereditary, idiopathic generalized epilepsy, representing 5–10% of all epilepsy cases. Typically it first presents between the ages of 12 and 18 with myoclonic seizures. These events typically occur after awakening from sleep, during the evening or when sleep-deprived. JME is also characterized by generalized tonic–clonic seizures, and a minority of patients have absence seizures. It was first described by Théodore Herpin in 1857. Understanding of the genetics of JME has been rapidly evolving since the 1990s, and over 20 chromosomal loci and multiple genes have been identified. Given the genetic and clinical heterogeneity of JME some authors have suggested that it should be thought of as a spectrum disorder.
Generalized epilepsy is a form of epilepsy characterised by generalised seizures with no apparent cause. Generalized seizures, as opposed to focal seizures, are a type of seizure that impairs consciousness and distorts the electrical activity of the whole or a larger portion of the brain.
A generalized tonic–clonic seizure, commonly known as a grand mal seizure or GTCS, is a type of generalized seizure that produces bilateral, convulsive tonic and clonic muscle contractions. Tonic–clonic seizures are the seizure type most commonly associated with epilepsy and seizures in general and the most common seizure associated with metabolic imbalances. It is a misconception that they are the sole type of seizure, as they are the main seizure type in approximately 10% of those with epilepsy.
Progressive Myoclonic Epilepsies (PME) are a rare group of inherited neurodegenerative diseases characterized by myoclonus, resistance to treatment, and neurological deterioration. The cause of PME depends largely on the type of PME. Most PMEs are caused by autosomal dominant or recessive and mitochondrial mutations. The location of the mutation also affects the inheritance and treatment of PME. Diagnosing PME is difficult due to their genetic heterogeneity and the lack of a genetic mutation identified in some patients. The prognosis depends largely on the worsening symptoms and failure to respond to treatment. There is no current cure for PME and treatment focuses on managing myoclonus and seizures through antiepileptic medication (AED).
Ohtahara syndrome (OS), also known as early infantile epileptic encephalopathy (EIEE) is a progressive epileptic encephalopathy. The syndrome is outwardly characterized by tonic spasms and partial seizures within the first few months of life, and receives its more elaborate name from the pattern of burst activity on an electroencephalogram (EEG). It is an extremely debilitating progressive neurological disorder, involving intractable seizures and severe intellectual disabilities. No single cause has been identified, although in many cases structural brain damage is present.
Benign Rolandic epilepsy or self-limited epilepsy with centrotemporal spikes is the most common epilepsy syndrome in childhood. Most children will outgrow the syndrome, hence the label benign. The seizures, sometimes referred to as sylvian seizures, start around the central sulcus of the brain.
Panayiotopoulos syndrome is a common idiopathic childhood-related seizure disorder that occurs exclusively in otherwise normal children and manifests mainly with autonomic epileptic seizures and autonomic status epilepticus. An expert consensus has defined Panayiotopoulos syndrome as "a benign age-related focal seizure disorder occurring in early and mid-childhood. It is characterized by seizures, often prolonged, with predominantly autonomic symptoms, and by an EEG [electroencephalogram] that shows shifting and/or multiple foci, often with occipital predominance."
Myoclonic astatic epilepsy (MAE), also known as myoclonic atonic epilepsy or Doose syndrome, is a generalized idiopathic epilepsy. It is characterized by the development of myoclonic seizures and/or myoclonic astatic seizures. Some of the common monogenic causes include mutations in the genes SLC6A1 (3p25.3),CHD2 (15q26.1), AP2M1 (10q23.2).
Jeavons syndrome is a type of epilepsy. It is one of the most distinctive reflex syndromes of idiopathic generalized epilepsy characterized by the triad of eyelid myoclonia with and without absences, eye-closure-induced seizures, EEG paroxysms, or both, and photosensitivity. Eyelid myoclonia with or without absences is a form of epileptic seizure manifesting with myoclonic jerks of the eyelids with or without a brief absence. These are mainly precipitated by closing of the eyes and lights. Eyelid myoclonia is the defining seizure type of Jeavons syndrome.
Febrile infection-related epilepsy syndrome (FIRES), is onset of severe seizures following a febrile illness in someone who was previously healthy. The seizures may initially be focal; however, often become tonic-clonic. Complications often include intellectual disability, behavioral problems, and ongoing seizures.
People with epilepsy may be classified into different syndromes based on specific clinical features. These features include the age at which seizures begin, the seizure types, and EEG findings, among others. Identifying an epilepsy syndrome is useful as it helps determine the underlying causes as well as deciding what anti-seizure medication should be tried. Epilepsy syndromes are more commonly diagnosed in infants and children. Some examples of epilepsy syndromes include benign rolandic epilepsy, childhood absence epilepsy and juvenile myoclonic epilepsy. Severe syndromes with diffuse brain dysfunction caused, at least partly, by some aspect of epilepsy, are also referred to as epileptic encephalopathies. These are associated with frequent seizures that are resistant to treatment and severe cognitive dysfunction, for instance Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and West syndrome.
A neonatal seizure is a seizure in a baby younger than age 4-weeks that is identifiable by an electrical recording of the brain. It is an occurrence of abnormal, paroxysmal, and persistent ictal rhythm with an amplitude of 2 microvolts in the electroencephalogram,. These may be manifested in form of stiffening or jerking of limbs or trunk. Sometimes random eye movements, cycling movements of legs, tonic eyeball movements, and lip-smacking movements may be observed. Alteration in heart rate, blood pressure, respiration, salivation, pupillary dilation, and other associated paroxysmal changes in the autonomic nervous system of infants may be caused due to these seizures. Often these changes are observed along with the observance of other clinical symptoms. A neonatal seizure may or may not be epileptic. Some of them may be provoked. Most neonatal seizures are due to secondary causes. With hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy being the most common cause in full term infants and intraventricular hemorrhage as the most common cause in preterm infants.
Malignant migrating partial seizures of infancy (MMPSI) is a rare epileptic syndrome that onsets before 6 months of age, commonly in the first few weeks of life. Once seizures start, the site of seizure activity repeatedly migrates from one area of the brain to another, with few periods of remission in between. These seizures are 'focal' (updated term for 'partial'), meaning they do not affect both sides of the brain at the same time. These continuous seizures cause damage to the brain, hence the descriptor 'malignant.'