The burden of epilepsy is not only related to seizure frequency; the severity of epileptic seizures considerably affects patient's lives. A number of seizure severity scales have thus been developed for a systematic assessment. Items considered relevant in these scales mainly pertain to objective features, such as seizure duration, loss of consciousness, and seizure-related injuries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The differentiation and assessment of anxiety in persons with epilepsy is the subject of current research. There is no consensus on which forms of anxiety are epilepsy-specific, what pathological significance they have, and how they should be conceptually systematized. The aim of this study was to detect formal landmarks that organize and further distinguish the clinical multitude of epilepsy-related anxiety, thereby establishing a basis on which an integrative assessment of epilepsy-specific fears can be developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Approximately 20% of people with epilepsy (PWE) suffer from anxiety. These fears are quite diverse and may manifest periictally or interictally, be part of the seizure's semiology, or an expression of reactive psychological distress from seizures themselves. Our review addresses the question of what screening tools are used in clinical care and epileptological research to capture the complexity of epilepsy-specific anxieties.
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