Article Text
Statistics from Altmetric.com
In patients with known or suspected epileptic seizures, non-specific activation methods such as hyperventilation or intermittent photic stimulation (IPS) are used to provoke epileptic potentials, which may prove the epileptic nature and specify epileptic syndromes. A photoconvulsive reaction with generalised spike wave activity may be provoked by IPS and is almost confined to patients with generalised epilepsy. There are, however, some reports on patients with partial epilepsy and photoconvulsive reaction.1 We report on two patients with known photoconvulsive reaction, who developed these with focal epileptic discharges consequent to IPS and discuss possible mechanisms.
Patient 1, a 44 year old woman presented with a 33 year history of complex partial seizures starting with behavioural arrest followed by oroalimentary automatisms, which were sometimes followed by secondary generalisation. She was treated with carbamazepine and reported 1–2 seizures a month. Brain MRI failed to disclose any focal abnormality. Except for mild generalised slowing (7.5/s), probably due to or accentuated by carbamazepine, focal slowing (5–4/s) with intermittent spikes showing phase inversion over F8 was seen in two EEG recordings (average of 1 spike …