Beware ictal activity that mimics psychiatric illness
How to detect and halt nonconvulsive status epilepticus.
Table 2
Differential diagnosis of NCSE
| Metabolic disorders | Hypo/hyperglycemia, hypercalcemia, Addison’s disease, Cushing’s disease, uremia |
| Neurologic disorders | Stroke, CNS tumors, closed head trauma, transient global amnesia, seizures, inflammatory and infectious encephalopathies |
| Psychiatric disorders | Schizophrenia, mood disorders, catatonia, malignant catatonia, somatoform disorders, conversion disorder, Asperger’s syndrome, malingering |
| Toxic disorders | Toxic encephalopathy, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, serotonin syndrome, alcohol and sedative-hypnotic withdrawal, drugs (lithium toxicity, tricyclics, baclofen, tiagabine, overdose) |
| Source: Reference 17,18 | |
Cerebrovascular disease, tumors, and trauma are the most common causes of late-life NCSE.4,19 De novo NCSE occasionally presents:
- after benzodiazepine withdrawal
- with neuroleptic, tricyclic antidepressant, or lithium treatment10,16
- with metabolic abnormalities and nonpsychotropic medications.10
Clinical symptoms
Clinical features of NCSE include cognitive changes, speech abnormalities, affective disturbances, psychosis, poor impulse control, and bizarre behaviors (Table 3). Some patients develop ictal phenomena resembling catatonia or clinical and EEG changes that mimic neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS).20-23
Table 3
Clinical features that raise suspicion of NCSE
| Domain | Features |
|---|---|
| Cognitive changes | Prolonged confusion, executive dysfunction, obtundation, attention/memory difficulties, lack of initiative, perseveration, stupor |
| Speech | Poverty of speech with monosyllabic answers, verbal perseveration, echolalia, palilalia, aphasia, paraphasic errors, confabulation, mutism |
| Affective | Prolonged fear, affective indifferent state with blank facial expression, hypomania, psychotic depression, inappropriate laughing and crying, anxiety states |
| Psychosis | Visual, auditory and cenesthetic hallucinations, delusions |
| Impulse control | Hostility, agitation, violence, groping, genital manipulation, picking, posturing |
| Others | Catatonic signs, autonomic disturbances |
| Source: References 5,7-9,12,15-17,20-23 | |
Among 29 patients with acute catatonic syndromes, epileptic activity was identified in 4. One patient with absence status was diagnosed with NMS during the catatonic period.26 Conversely, the commonality of clinical features has led to misdiagnosis of psychogenic catatonia as NCSE. EEG is necessary to exclude NCSE in these cases.
NMS. Yoshino et al27 described two patients taking neuroleptics who met criteria for NMS and had EEG changes consistent with NCSE. They later reported another patient with NCSE complicating NMS; the point at which NCSE developed was unknown, however, because EEG activity was not recorded at NMS onset.28 Based on NMS diagnostic criteria proposed by Caroff et al,29 these patients could have developed NCSE mimicking NMS.
EEG for diagnosis
Candidates. Because differentiating NCSE from similar conditions can be difficult, use EEG to confirm your clinical observations. No guidelines exist, but consider EEG when the patient’s history suggests NCSE. Ask the patient or family about:
- changes in mental status from baseline, especially new-onset catatonia or unexplained altered consciousness
- duration of events
- presence or absence of motor activity
- behavioral fluctuations
- presence or absence of automatisms or blinking.
EEG patterns. Table 4 summarized NCSE diagnostic criteria. NCSE shows characteristic patterns in ASE and CPSE,9,10,16,23 and EEG changes can be continuous or nearly continuous in both.
Table 4
EEG findings that support a clinical diagnosis of NCSE
| Clear-cut criteria |
|---|
| Frequent or continuous focal seizures, with ictal patterns that wax and wane with change in amplitude, frequency, and/or spatial distribution |
| Frequent or continuous generalized spike wave discharges: |
|
| Periodic lateralized epileptiform discharges (“PLEDs”) or bilateral periodic epileptiform discharges (“biPEDs") occurring in patients with coma from generalized tonic-clonic status epilepticus (subtle SE) |
| Probable (equivocal) criteria |
| Patients with acute cerebral damage who also show frequent or continuous EEG abnormalities without previous similar findings |
| Patients with epilepsy who show frequent or continuous generalized EEG abnormalities and similar interictal EEG patterns but whose clinical symptoms suggest NCSE |
| Source: References 4,12-14,17 |