New onset left frontal lobe seizure presenting with ictal asystole.

Sean A Enkiri, Forough Ghavami, Chinekwu Anyanwu, Zayd Eldadah, Richard L Morrissey, Gholam K Motamedi
Author Information
  1. Sean A Enkiri: Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiology, Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, DC 20007, USA.

Abstract

Ictal asystole is a presumably rare but potentially fatal complication of seizures, most often of temporal lobe origin. It is believed that at least some cases of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy (SUDEP) might be triggered by ictal bradycardia or asystole. Current standard practice is to implant a permanent pacemaker in these patients to prevent syncope and/or death. However, emerging data suggests that effective medical or surgical treatment of epilepsy might be enough to prevent cardiac asystole, eliminating the need for permanent pacemaker placement. We describe a case of new onset left frontal lobe epilepsy in a young athletic patient who presented with near-syncopal episodes but whose comprehensive work-up revealed frequent events of ictal bradycardia and asystole. He responded well to monotherapy using oxcarbazepine, avoiding a permanent pacemaker.

MeSH Term

Adult
Anticonvulsants
Bradycardia
Carbamazepine
Electrocardiography
Electroencephalography
Frontal Lobe
Heart Arrest
Humans
Male
Oxcarbazepine
Seizures

Chemicals

Anticonvulsants
Carbamazepine
Oxcarbazepine

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