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Many patients referred
for an epilepsy evaluation actually suffer from one of many
conditions that can imitate it. Imitators of epilepsy are a diverse
group that involve consideration of many areas of internal
medicine, neurology, and psychiatry. The most important imitators
of epileptic seizures are dizziness, vertigo, syncope, complicated
migraine; and somewhat less frequently sleep disorders, transient
cerebral ischemia, paroxysmal movement disorders, endocrine or
metabolic dysfunction, delirium, psychiatric conditions or
transient global amnesia. Clearly under-recognized are
hyperventilation episodes, panic attacks, and other psychogenic and
psychiatric paroxysmal disorders that may simulate epileptic
seizures. This volume provides a comprehensive review of the
differential diagnosis of seizures: how do the imitators of
epilepsy present clinically, what are their particular
distinguishing historical features, and what tests are helpful with
diagnosis?
Expanding
beyond the first edition, this second edition is divided into four
sections. The first deals with an introduction and approach
diagnosing spells, the electroencephalography of epilepsy and its
imitators, and specialized tests of diagnosis such as measurement
of serum prolactin. There are chapters on epileptic seizures that
do not look like typical epileptic seizures, and conversely,
apparent epileptic seizures that are not. A second section
approaches imitators of epileptic seizures along age-based lines;
i.e., what sorts of spells are likely to beset infants, children,
or the elderly? A third section addresses individual imitators of
epilepsy, ranging from the common to the rare, from dizziness and
faintness to startle disease, arranged according to whether they
might simulate partial, generalized, or both types of epileptic
seizures. The volume finishes off with hyperventilation syndrome,
psychogenic seizures (with or without epilepsy), and panic
disorders.
Most
chapters review the basic definitions and physiology of the
respective imitator, followed by the clinical characteristics.
Emphasis is given to those features that may differentiate it from
an epileptic event, but also mark it for what it is, and give
possible criteria for an alternate diagnosis. Case vignettes are
used to illustrate particular aspects, along with tables that
compare and contrast phenotypically similar conditions. Based on
their extensive clinical experience, the authors provide a personal
perspective on diagnosis and treatment.
| Product Code |
Description |
Attributes |
Price | |
| Peter W. Kaplan, Robert S. Fisher ISBN: 9781888799835 |
Hardback - 2005 |
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£68.50
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