On
its website, the Epilepsy Foundation recently
published an excellent review of Post-Traumatic Head Injury and Epilepsy by Elaine
Kiriakopoulos MD, MSc.1
Dr.
Kiriakopoulos explains what Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is: that it results
from significant brain trauma, often accompanied by skull fracture, due to
collisions and to shaking infants severely. Here, the infant brain is
traumatized by thrusts against structures within the skull. Bruising of the
brain occurs in significant concussion. Brain bleeding, however, is more
serious. Brain scan imaging can usually demonstrate these different injuries.
When trauma is severe brain swelling, (edema) often occurs. Such swelling can
cause changes in consciousness as coma, confusion, long term headaches,
seizures, motor and sensory abnormalities, and chronic cognitive and
personality changes.
Mild head injury may just require
reassurance and observation at home. If seizures develop within days these may
be temporary and don’t necessarily represent epilepsy, i.e., recurrent
seizures. If seizures develop weeks, months, or a few years later, this would
fit the condition, “post traumatic” epilepsy.
Dr. Kiriakopoulos’ review relates
that early post-traumatic seizures in the first week can be seen in10% of such
patients and would not necessarily develop into chronic epilepsy nor require
anticonvulsant medications. Prophylactically taking anticonvulsive medications
after head trauma as a seizure-deterrent is problematical. Seizures developing
later than 1 week is likely post traumatic epilepsy and the seizures will recur
in 2% of patients. Seizures developing in year 1 are seen in 50% of post
traumatic patients. Such post traumatic seizures occurring during year 2 are
seen in 30% and after 2 years in 20%. Some patients develop epilepsy 15 years
after the head trauma.
Treatment
of this condition includes anticonvulsant medications. The more serious the
brain injury the more likely the medication will be less effective. In this
situation surgical removal of a significant post-traumatic scar shown to be the
focus of the epilepsy (scans, EEGs, etc.) and which is also amenable to safe
removal of the abnormal brain tissue without causing significant neurological
effects can prove curative. I review surgical treatments of epilepsy on my
blogs: Blog
#114: EPILEPSY SURGERY IN CHILDHOOD AND LONG-TERM EMPLOYMENT IS ENCOURAGING Blog
#121: IF YOUR SEIZURES AREN’T CONTROLLED EPILEPSY SURGERY IS SAFE AND REALLY
CAN HELP; and Blog
#121: IF YOUR SEIZURES AREN’T CONTROLLED EPILEPSY SURGERY IS SAFE AND REALLY
CAN HELP.
Lance Fogan, M.D. is Clinical Professor of Neurology at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA. His hard-hitting emotional family medical drama, “DINGS, is told from a mother’s point of view. “DINGS” is his first novel. Aside from acclamation on internet bookstore sites, U.S. Report of Books, and the Hollywood Book Review, DINGS has been advertised in recent New York Times Book Reviews, the Los Angeles Times Calendar section and Publishers Weekly. DINGS teaches epilepsy and is now available in eBook, audiobook, soft and hard cover editions.
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