Background: Chest pain as the primary manifestation of epilepsy is extremely rare and has only been reported once to date. Case presentation: We herein describe a 47-year-old woman with recurrent chest pain for 3 years. The cause of her chest pain remained elusive despite extensive investigations including comprehensive cardiac work-up. She was referred to the neurology clinic for one episode of confusion. Video-electroencephalographic monitoring detected unequivocal ictal changes during her habitual chest pain events. She has remained chest pain (seizure) free with a single antiseizure drug. Conclusions: This case underlines the importance of epilepsy as a rare yet treatable cause of recurrent chest pain. Further studies are required to determine the pathophysiology of ictal chest pain.
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CITATION STYLE
Khoo, C. S., Lee, D., Park, K. M., In Lee, B., & Kim, S. E. (2019). A rare but treatable cause of recurrent chest pain - Ictal chest pain. BMC Neurology, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12883-019-1575-0