14 results match your criteria: "Sleep Centre SEIN[Affiliation]"

Antiseizure Medication Withdrawal Practice Patterns: A Survey Among Members of the American Academy of Neurology and EpiCARE.

Neurol Clin Pract

February 2023

Department of Neurology (SWT), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Department of Child Neurology (GS, WMO, KB), UMC Utrecht Brain Center, University Medical Center Utrecht and Utrecht University, the Netherlands; American Academy of Neurology (CER), Minneapolis, MN; University of Michigan Medical School (ASH); Department of Health Management and Policy (SNS), School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor; Department of Clinical Neurophysiology and Sleep Centre SEIN Zwolle (RvG, CJJvA), the Netherlands; Department of Neurology (JFB), the Ohio State University, Columbus; and Member of the European Reference Network EpiCARE (KPJB).

Background And Objectives: To describe neurologist practice patterns, challenges, and decision support needs pertaining to withdrawal of antiseizure medications (ASMs) in patients with well-controlled epilepsy.

Methods: We sent an electronic survey to (1) US and (2) European physician members of the American Academy of Neurology and (3) members of EpiCARE, a European Reference Network for rare and complex epilepsies. Analyses included frequencies and percentages, and we showed distributions through histograms and violin plots.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Studies in adults with epilepsy, mainly in specialized epilepsy clinics, have shown that sleep disturbances were twice as prevalent in people with epilepsy as in healthy controls. Our aim was to determine the prevalence of sleep disturbances in people with epilepsy treated in district hospitals, as well as the impact of it on Quality of Life.

Method: Adults with epilepsy, attending outpatient clinics in three district hospitals were invited to participate.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As early as in 1898, it was noted that there was a need to find "a plausible explanation of the long recognized affinities of migraine and epilepsy". However, results of recent studies are clearly conflicting on this matter. In this cross-sectional study, we aimed to define the prevalence and characteristics of both seizure-related and interictal headaches in patients with epilepsy (5-75years) seeking help in the tertiary epilepsy clinic SEIN in Zwolle.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Headache is a frequently heard complaint that can strongly influence quality of life. This is probably even more so in people with a chronic illness. Knowing that headache, and especially migraine, is more frequent among epilepsy patients, the knowledge concerning this problem has been studied among Dutch neurologists.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia (CBT-I) is a well-known, effective treatment for primary insomnia. However, the majority of sleeping problems occur in the presence of another medical or psychiatric disorder. Depression and general anxiety disorder (with a main feature of excessive generalized worrying) are disorders that frequently co-occur with insomnia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: The purposes of this study were to explore the prevalence of sleep disturbances in a large cohort of school-aged children with partial epilepsy, to compare the findings with those in children without epilepsy of the same age and gender, and to evaluate the relationship between sleep disturbances and health-related quality of life (HRQoL).

Methods: One hundred thirty children with partial epilepsy aged 4 to 10years, who were treated in the outpatient setting of a Dutch epilepsy clinic, and 161 age- and sex-matched controls participated in this study. In addition to providing information about their child's demography and health, parents of both groups of children completed three questionnaires to measure their child's sleep [Sleep Disturbance Scale for Children (SDSC), Medical Outcomes Study-Sleep Scale (MOSS-S), and Groningen Sleep Quality Scale (GSQS)] and one questionnaire to measure quality of life (Kidscreen-27).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Nocturnal seizures may disturb sleep, but the effect of an epileptic seizure during daytime on sleep during the next night has been under investigated. In this proof-of-principle study, the sleep of 425 patients with epilepsy, who underwent long-term video-electroencephalography recordings, was analyzed. The sleep recordings were retrospectively divided into two groups: Seizure Free, no seizure occurred at least 24 h before the start of the night sleep recording, and Daytime Seizure, at least one (secondarily) generalized seizure occurred during the day before.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The interaction between epilepsy and sleep is thoroughly studied and is very complex. This review focuses on prevalence, impact on quality of life and effects of treatment of sleep disorders on the course of epilepsy. Self-reported sleep disturbances in people with epilepsy are about twice as prevalent as in healthy controls.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is strong evidence that epileptic seizures occur in diurnal or 24-h patterns. A study in rat models of partial epilepsy showed circadian seizure patterns, and in humans circadian rhythmicity in interictal discharges has been found, suggesting that circadian rhythm may play a role in epilepsy. Circadian influences on human seizure patterns have not been investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Accumulating evidence suggests epilepsy and seizures may influence circadian rhythms and that circadian rhythms may influence epilepsy. It is also conceivable that seizure timing influences the timing of daily activities, sleeping, and wakefulness (i.e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Few studies have evaluated human seizure occurrence over the 24-hour day, and only one group has employed intracranial electrocorticography monitoring to record seizures. Circadian patterns in seizures may have important implications in diagnosis and therapy and provide opportunities in research. We have analyzed spontaneous seizures in 33 consecutive patients with long-term intracranial EEG and video monitoring.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Knowledge on the interaction between circadian rhythm and human epilepsy is relatively poor, although if it exists, this interaction may be of value for better knowledge of pathophysiology and for timing of diagnostic procedures and therapy. It appears that human seizure occurrence may have 24-h rhythmicity, depending on the origin. These findings are endorsed by animal studies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Very few studies have evaluated seizure occurrence in humans over the 24-h day; data from children are particularly scarce. Circadian patterns in seizure occurrence may be of importance in epilepsy research and may have important implications in diagnosis and therapy.

Methods: We have analyzed clinical seizures of 176 consecutive patients (76 children, 100 adults) who had continuous electroencephalography (EEG) and video monitoring lasting more than 22 h.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

It is well known that seizures of some types of epilepsy tend to occur in patterns. The circadian rhythm may play a significant role in this phenomenon. In animal studies it has been found that seizures in experimental partial epilepsy are probably under the influence of the biological clock.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF