Cardiac arrest associated with epileptic seizures: A case report with simultaneous EEG and ECG.

Journal: Epilepsy & Behavior Case Reports
Published:
Abstract

Ictal asystole is a rare, probably underestimated manifestation of epileptic seizures whose pathophysiology is still debated. This report describes two patients who had cardiac asystole at the end of their seizure. The first patient was a 13-year-old boy with complex partial seizures.. His MRI showed symmetrical signal abnormality in the bilateral parietooccipital lobe accompanied by mild gliosis and volume loss. During a 3-day long-term video-EEG monitoring, he had cardiac arrest at the end of one of his seizures that was secondarily generalized. The second one was a 42-year-old veteran with penetrating head trauma in the left frontal lobe due to shell injury. During long-term video-EEG monitoring, he had one generalized tonic-clonic seizure accompanied by bradycardia and cardiac asystole. Asystoles could have a role in the incidence of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), meaning that the presence of ictal bradycardia is a risk factor for SUDEP. In cases of epileptic cardiac dysrhythmia, prolonged simultaneous EEG/ECG monitoring may be required. Cardiological investigation should be included in epilepsy management.

Authors
Jafar Mehvari, Fatemeh Fadaie, Shirin Omidi, Mohammadmehran Poorsina, Masoumeh Najafi Ziarani, Marzieh Gharekhani, Nahid Beladimoghadam, Elham Rahimian, Houshang Moein, Majid Barakatain, Mohammad Basiratnia, Seyed Hashemi Fesharaki