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What are parents' experiences of caring for their children with epilepsy? : a qualitative systematic review and thematic synthesis ; and, Mothers' experiences of being told about the risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) for their child : an interpretative phenomenological analysisGalliard, Helen January 2018 (has links)
Background: Parents of children with epilepsy have been shown to have higher rates of depression, anxiety and stress in comparison to parents of children without epilepsy due to the impact of caring for a child with a chronic condition. A systematic review of existing literature aimed to identify qualitative research that examined parents' experiences of caring for their children with epilepsy. Methods: The systematic review explored the experiences that parents have in caring for their child with epilepsy. A search of electronic databases for qualitative literature was completed. The quality of all eligible articles papers was assessed, and findings from studies were synthesised. Results: Twelve studies met inclusion criteria for the review; findings suggest that parents need time to process their child's diagnosis of epilepsy; they cope with this in differing ways and are motivated to learn how to adapt and cope with parenting their child with epilepsy. Conclusions: Parents of children with epilepsy may experience symptoms of stress, this may motivate them to learn how best to care for their child. Empirical Paper Abstract Background: Parents' experiences of being told about sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) may be particularly challenging to cope with. As little is known about how mothers understand and make sense of SUDEP, a qualitative research project aimed to explore mothers' experiences. It was hoped this would be helpful for clinicians to understand in order to assist them in providing information to parents in a way that minimises distress. Methods: The empirical article explored mother's experiences of being told about SUDEP and the subsequent impact of this for 11 mothers of children with epilepsy. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis methodology was utilised, with themes derived from interpretation of interview transcripts, in order to describe the experiences of the participants. Results: Within the empirical study, five themes emerged. The way in which mothers found out about SUDEP seemed to have a link to their perception of risk and how they subsequently managed feelings of uncertainty and the psychological impact of knowing about SUDEP. Mothers' recommendations to clinicians included when, how and what to tell other parents, and were based on their own helpful and unhelpful experiences of being informed about SUDEP. Conclusions: In being told about SUDEP, mothers may struggle to make sense of it and this can be associated with an increase in anxiety. However, clinicians can reduce potential distress by carefully timing when and how they tell parents, and by making sure information is clear and relevant for the child in question.
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ALTERATIONS IN GABAERGIC NTS NEURON FUNCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH TLE AND SUDEPDerera, Isabel Diane 01 January 2018 (has links)
Epilepsy is a neurological disorder that is characterized by aberrant electrical activity in the brain resulting in at least two unprovoked seizures over a period longer than 24 hours. Approximately 60% of individuals with epilepsy are diagnosed with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and about one third of those individuals do not respond well to anti-seizure medications. This places those individuals at high risk for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). SUDEP is defined as when an individual with epilepsy, who is otherwise healthy, dies suddenly and unexpectedly for unknown reasons. SUDEP is one of the leading causes of death in individuals with acquired epilepsies (i.e. not due to genetic mutations), such as TLE. Previous studies utilizing genetic models of epilepsy have suggested that circuitry within the vagal complex of the brainstem may play a role in SUDEP risk. Gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) neurons of the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) within the vagal complex receive, filter, and modulate cardiorespiratory information from the vagus nerve. GABAergic NTS neurons then project to cardiac vagal motor neurons, eventually effecting parasympathetic output to the periphery. In this study, a mouse model of TLE was used to assess the effect of epileptogenesis on GABAergic NTS neuron function and determine if functional alterations in these neurons impact SUDEP risk. It was discovered that mice with TLE (i.e. TLE mice) have significantly increased mortality rates compared to control animals, suggesting that SUDEP occurs in this model. Using whole cell electrophysiology synaptic and intrinsic properties of GABAergic NTS neurons were investigated in TLE and control mice. Results suggest that during epileptogenesis, GABAergic NTS neurons become hyperexcitable, potentially due to a reduction in A-type potassium channel current and increased excitatory synaptic input. Increases in hyperexcitability have been shown to be associated with an increased risk of spreading depolarization and action potential inactivation leading to neuronal quiescence. This may lead to a decreased inhibition of parasympathetic tone, causing cardiorespiratory collapse and SUDEP in TLE.
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Assessment of heart rate variability as an indicator of cardiovascular autonomic dysregulation in subjects with chronic epilepsySuorsa, E. (Eija) 01 November 2011 (has links)
Abstract
Autonomic dysfunction in epilepsy is widely recognized. Both partial and generalized epilepsies affect autonomic functions during interictal, ictal and postictal states. Interestingly, there is increasing evidence of interictal autonomic nervous system dysfunction as evidenced by reduced heart rate (HR) variability in patients with epilepsy. Reduced HR variation has also been detected in many other chronic diseases and it has been shown to be associated with unfavourable prognosis with an increased risk of mortality in various heart diseases. Recently, more attention has also been paid to possible association of decreased HR variability with sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). However, the clinical significance of the observed changes in cardiovascular regulation in patients with epilepsy is still poorly outlined and there are no long-term studies about changes in HR variation in relation to epilepsy.
This study was designed to evaluate long-term changes in autonomic cardiovascular regulation in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) and also to evaluate HR variation during vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) treatment in patients with refractory epilepsy, using 24-hour ambulatory ECG recordings. Special attention was paid to changes in HR variation and to circadian HR fluctuation over time.
The results of this study show that autonomic cardiovascular regulation is affected both in patients with well-controlled TLE and in patients with refractory TLE, and that the cardiovascular dysregulation also presents itself with changes in circadian HR variability, with more pronounced alterations observed during the night time. HR variability was also found to decrease progressively with time in patients with chronic refractory TLE with uncontrolled seizures. VNS treatment was not observed to alter HR variation. / Tiivistelmä
Epilepsiapotilailla esiintyy autonomisen hermoston toiminnan häiriöitä. Näitä häiriöitä voidaan todeta epilepsiakohtausten aikana, heti kohtausten jälkeen ja kohtausten välillä sekä paikallisalkuisissa että yleistyneissä epilepsioissa. Viimeaikaisissa tutkimuksissa on osoitettu kardiovaskulaarisen säätelyjärjestelmän häiriöiden voivan ilmentyä alentuneena sydämen sykevaihteluna epilepsiakohtausten väliaikoina. Sydänsairauksien yhteydessä sykevaihtelun vähenemisen on osoitettu liittyvän kohonneeseen kuolemanriskiin. Epilepsiapotilailla alentuneen sydämen sykevaihtelun on epäilty liittyvän epilepsiapotilailla ilmenevien odottamattomien ja ilman selkeää syytä tapahtuvien äkkikuolemien (SUDEP) lisääntyneeseen riskiin. Kertyneestä tiedosta huolimatta alentuneen sykevaihtelun kliininen merkitys epilepsiapotilailla on edelleen epäselvä. Pitkäaikaisseurantatutkimuksia sydämen sykevaihtelun muutoksista epilepsiapotilailla ei ole julkaistu.
Tämän tutkimuksen tarkoituksena oli selvittää ohimolohkoepilepsiaan liittyviä pitkäaikaisia interiktaalisia (kohtausten välillä esiintyviä) kardiovaskulaarisia ilmentymiä. Lisäksi haluttiin tutkia vaikeahoitoisessa epilepsiassa käytetyn hoitomuodon, vagushermostimulaation, mahdollisia vaikutuksia sydämen toimintaan. Erityisesti haluttiin analysoida sykevaihtelun vuorokausirytmiä.
Tulokset osoittavat autonomisen hermoston kardiovaskulaarisen säätelyjärjestelmän toiminnan olevan häiriintyneen sekä vaikeahoitoisilla että hyvähoitoisilla ohimolohkoalkuista epilepsiaa sairastavilla potilailla. Sydämen sykevariaatio on alentunut erityisesti yöaikaan. Lisäksi sydämen sykevaihtelu alenee pitkäaikaisseurannassa vaikeahoitoista epilepsiaa sairastavilla potilailla, joilla ilmenee toistuvia epileptisiä kohtauksia. Vagusstimulaatio ei aiheuttanut muutoksia syketaajuuden vaihteluun.
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The role of the insula in heart rate variabilityTran, Thi Phuoc Yen 12 1900 (has links)
Des preuves cumulatives soutiennent le rôle de l'insula dans la régulation autonomique cardiaque et son dysfonctionnement pourrait être impliqué dans la physiopathologie de la mort subite et inexpliquée en épilepsie (MSIE –SUDEP en anglais). La variabilité de la fréquence cardiaque (VFC) est un outil simple et fiable pour évaluer la fonction autonomique; il est également considéré comme un prédicteur potentiel de la tachycardie ventriculaire et de la mort subite chez les patients après un infarctus du myocarde. Au cours des deux dernières décennies, la VFC a suscité beaucoup d'intérêt dans le monde de l'épilepsie. Toutefois, même si plusieurs études ont tenté d'évaluer les changements de VFC dans différentes formes d'épilepsie, les résultats ont été hétérogènes voire paradoxaux de sorte que son utilité en tant que marqueur de la MSIE est loin d’être concluant. Notons que la majorité des études ont porté sur l’épilepsie temporale. Aucune étude n’a étudié les changements de la fonction autonomique cardiaque dans l'épilepsie insulo-operculaire (EIO). Il est encore incertain si une chirurgie d’épilepsie insulaire peut accélérer la dysfonction autonomique inhérente. Dans cette étude, nous visons à étudier les changements de la VFC interictale chez les patients avec EIO. Nous avons en outre évalué l'effet de la chirurgie insulo-operculaire sur ces modifications de la VFC.
Quatorze patients avec une EIO et un bon résultat post-chirurgie insulo-operculaire (Engel I-II) ont été recrutés pour cette étude. Quatorze patients appariés pour l'âge et le sexe atteints d'épilepsie du lobe temporal (ELT) et exempts de crise après une lobectomie temporale antérieure et 28 individus en bonne santé appariés selon l'âge et le sexe ont également été identifiés pour les besoins de l’étude. La VFC dans le domaine temporel RMSSD (root mean square of successive RR interval differences, pNN50 (percentage of successive RR intervals that differ by more than 50ms) et le domaine fréquentiel LF (low frequency) et HF (high frequency) ont été étudiés dans les périodes préopératoire et postopératoire (6-204 mois). La VFC avant la chirurgie des patients épileptiques fut calculée à partir des enregistrements EKG obtenus simultanément aux enregistrements vidéo-EEGs effectués dans le cadre de leur évaluation préchirurgicale. La VFC après la chirurgie fut calculée chez tous les patients et les sujets sains à partir d’un EKG de repos d'une durée d’une heure au laboratoire. Le score d’inventaire des risques de MSIE (le score SUDEP-7) a été calculé à partir des données cliniques obtenues dans le dossier médical de chaque patient.
Les résultats n'ont montré aucune différence statistiquement significative dans toutes les mesures de VFC entre les groupes de patients avec EIO, de patients avec ELT avant la chirurgie et de sujets sains. Chez les patients avec EIO, le score SUDEP-7 variant de 1 à 6 (moyenne de 2,9; SD :1,2) était positivement corrélé avec le pNN50 (r = 0,671; p = 0,009 et Ln (RMSSD) (r = 0,591; p = 0,026). En postopératoire, les mesures de la VFC n'étaient pas statistiquement différentes des valeurs préopératoires ou de celles des témoins. Nous avons mené une analyse exploratoire dans laquelle nous avons stratifié les patients avec EIO en deux sous-groupes : un premier groupe (1a) dont les valeurs préopératoires de Ln (RMSSD) étaient inférieures à 3,52 (valeur moyenne de notre échantillon sain) et un second groupe (1b) dont les valeurs préopératoires étaient au-dessus. En préopératoire, dans le groupe 1a, toutes les valeurs du domaine temporel et fréquentiel (LnRMSSD, pNN50, LnLF et LnHF) étaient significativement inférieures à celles du groupe témoin (p <0,01), tandis que dans le groupe 1b, seules les valeurs du domaine temporel (LnRMSSD et pNN50) étaient significativement plus élevées que ceux du groupe témoin (p <0,01). Dans les deux groupes, les valeurs de la VFC avaient tendance à se normaliser après l'opération. En revanche, la lobectomie temporale antérieure des patients avec ELT n'a pas modifié les valeurs de HRV.
Ces résultats préliminaires suggèrent que dans les EIO réfractaires, la VFC peut être soit diminuée au niveau du tonus sympathique et parasympathique, soit augmentée au niveau du tonus parasympathique. L'augmentation du tonus parasympathique est possiblement inquiétante puisqu’elle était corrélée positivement avec le score SUDEP-7. Une operculo-insulectomie n'a pas affecté négativement la VFC; au contraire, une chirurgie réussie semble entraîner une certaine ‘normalisation’ de l’HRV. Une confirmation avec un échantillon plus grand est nécessaire. / Cumulative evidence supports the role of the insula in cardiac autonomic regulation whose dysfunction may be involved in the pathophysiology of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). Heart rate variability (HRV) is a simple and reliable tool to assess autonomic function; it is even considered a potential predictor of ventricular tachycardia and sudden death in patients after myocardial infarction. Over the last two decades, heart rate variability (HRV) has also received much interest in epilepsy research. Several studies have tried to assess HRV changes in different epilepsy types but the results have been heterogeneous and sometimes contradictory; its role as a marker of SUDEP remains uncertain. Of note, most studies involved TLE patients and TLE surgeries; none have looked at HRV changes in insulo-opercular epilepsy (IOE) and how insular resection can affect autonomic function. In this study, we aimed to investigate changes in interictal HRV in IOE. We further evaluated the effect of insulo-opercular surgery on these HRV changes.
Fourteen IOE patients who had a good outcome (Engel I-II) after an insulo-opercular surgery were enrolled in this study. Fourteen age- and sex-matched patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) who were seizure-free after temporal lobectomy and 28 age- and sex-matched healthy individuals were also included. HRV measurements including time domain root mean square of successive RR interval differences (RMSSD) and percentage of successive RR intervals that differ by more than 50ms (pNN50) and frequency domain low-frequency (LF) and high-frequency (HF) parameters were carried out in pre- and post-operative periods (6-204 months). Presurgical HRV values for epileptic patients were calculated using EKG obtained simultaneously with video-EEG recordings during the presurgical evaluation. HRV of healthy individuals and post-surgical HRV from all operated epileptic patients were calculated from a 1-hour resting electrocardiogram at the laboratory. We also collected the patients’ presurgical data to calculate the SUDEP-7 risk inventory score.
Findings showed no statistically significant differences in all HRV measurements between groups of IOE patients, TLE patients before the surgery, and healthy controls. In IOE patients, the SUDEP-7 score ranged from 1 to 6 (mean 2,9; SD: 1,6) and was positively correlated with pNN50 (r=0,671; p<0,009) and LnRMSSD (r=0,591; p<0,026). Postoperatively, HRV measurements were not statistically different from either preoperative values or those of controls. We conducted exploratory analyses where we stratified IOE patients into those whose preoperative LnRMSSD values were below (Group 1a) versus above (Group 1b) a cut-off threshold of 3,52 (mean value of our healthy sample). Preoperatively, in Group 1a, all time and frequency domain values (LnRMSSD, pNN50, LnLF, and LnHF) were significantly lower than those of controls (p<0,01) while in Group 1b, only time-domain values (LnRMSSD and pNN50) were significantly higher than those of control subjects (p<0,01). In both groups, HRV values tended to normalize postoperatively. In contrast, anterior temporal lobectomy for TLE patients did not alter HRV values.
Our preliminary results suggest that in refractory IOE, HRV may be either decreased globally in sympathetic and parasympathetic tones or increased in parasympathetic tone. The increase in parasympathetic tone observed preoperatively may be of clinical concern as it was positively correlated with the SUDEP-7 score. The insulo-opercular resection did not affect the HRV; successful surgery might even have a good impact on HRV changes. Confirmation with a larger sample size is necessary.
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