TY - JOUR
T1 - Psychiatric Classification of Nonconversion Nonepileptic Seizures
AU - Alper, Kenneth
AU - Devinsky, Orrin
AU - Perrine, Kenneth
AU - Vazquez, Blanca
AU - Luciano, Daniel
PY - 1995/2
Y1 - 1995/2
N2 - To determine the frequency and type of nonconversion nonepileptic seizures (NES). Although conversion disorder is the most common psychiatric disorder among patients with NES, many patients with nonepileptic paroxysmal behavioral events have other psychiatric disorders, with natural histories and treatments different from those of conversion disorder. Retrospective review of a series of consecutive admissions for video-electroencephalography monitoring. All patients identified with NES were interviewed by a psychiatrist. Patients with conversion and other psychiatric disorders were divided into separate groups. A comprehensive epilepsy center. Twenty-one patients evaluated for possible epileptic seizures had a psychiatric disorder other than conversion that accounted for their events. Among these patients, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Revised Third Edition (DSM-III-R)anxiety disorders (n=9) were the most common diagnosed category, followed by all forms of psychotic disorders (n=7) and impulse control problems in the setting of attention deficit disorder residual type (n=2). In contrast to 71 patients with conversion NES seen over the same period of time, the nonconversion group showed no female predominance and the nonconversion patients were significantly less likely than the conversion patients to have been physically or sexually abused in childhood or adolescence. These results support the validity of the nosologic distinction of nonconversion from conversion NES and suggest that DSM-III-Ranxiety disorders are an important diagnostic confound in clinical epilepsy.
AB - To determine the frequency and type of nonconversion nonepileptic seizures (NES). Although conversion disorder is the most common psychiatric disorder among patients with NES, many patients with nonepileptic paroxysmal behavioral events have other psychiatric disorders, with natural histories and treatments different from those of conversion disorder. Retrospective review of a series of consecutive admissions for video-electroencephalography monitoring. All patients identified with NES were interviewed by a psychiatrist. Patients with conversion and other psychiatric disorders were divided into separate groups. A comprehensive epilepsy center. Twenty-one patients evaluated for possible epileptic seizures had a psychiatric disorder other than conversion that accounted for their events. Among these patients, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Revised Third Edition (DSM-III-R)anxiety disorders (n=9) were the most common diagnosed category, followed by all forms of psychotic disorders (n=7) and impulse control problems in the setting of attention deficit disorder residual type (n=2). In contrast to 71 patients with conversion NES seen over the same period of time, the nonconversion group showed no female predominance and the nonconversion patients were significantly less likely than the conversion patients to have been physically or sexually abused in childhood or adolescence. These results support the validity of the nosologic distinction of nonconversion from conversion NES and suggest that DSM-III-Ranxiety disorders are an important diagnostic confound in clinical epilepsy.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0028928604&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1001/archneur.1995.00540260105025
DO - 10.1001/archneur.1995.00540260105025
M3 - Article
C2 - 7848132
AN - SCOPUS:0028928604
SN - 0003-9942
VL - 52
SP - 199
EP - 201
JO - Archives of Neurology
JF - Archives of Neurology
IS - 2
ER -