Prolonged sensory or visceral symptoms: An under-diagnosed form of non-convulsive focal (simple partial) status epilepticus

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Abstract

Four patients had prolonged, sensory, simple partial seizures (SPS), lasting up to several days, without associated behavioural impairment. In three patients, the SPS often occurred as a prolonged 'aura' before a more overt seizure. Descriptions included: 'butterflies', rising epigastric sensation; 'a thought in the stomach', and an olfactory sensation. Seizure localisation was frontal in one case, temporal in two cases and uncertain in one case. These sensations may represent an under-reported form of continuous, focal seizure activity, which arises from various cerebral regions.

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Manford, M., & Shorvon, S. D. (1992). Prolonged sensory or visceral symptoms: An under-diagnosed form of non-convulsive focal (simple partial) status epilepticus. Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, 55(8), 714–716. https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp.55.8.714

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