Abstract
BackgroundIdentification of clinical features that might distinguish psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) from epileptic seizures (ES) is of value for diagnosis, management, and understanding of both conditions. Previous studies have shown that patients' descriptions of their seizures reflect differences in content and delivery. We aimed to compare verbal descriptions of PNES and ES using a mixed-methods approach. MethodsWe analyzed data from semi-structured interviews in which patients with video-electroencephalography (EEG)-confirmed ES (n = 30) or PNES (n = 10) described their seizures. Two masked raters independently coded the transcripts for relevant psychological categories and discrepancies that were noted and resolved. Additional analyses were conducted using the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count system. The identified phenomena were descriptively compared, and inferential analyses assessed group differences in frequencies. A logistic regression analysis examined the predictive power of the most distinctive phenomena for diagnosis. ResultsAs compared with ES, PNES reported longer seizures, more preseizure negative emotions (e.g., fear), anxiety symptoms (e.g., arousal, hyperventilation), altered vision/olfaction, and automatic behaviors. During seizures, PNES reported more fear, altered breathing, and dissociative phenomena (depersonalization, impaired time perception). Epileptic seizures reported more self-injurious behavior. Postseizure, PNES reported more fear and weeping and ES more amnesia and aches. The predictive power when including these variables was 97.5%. None of the single predictor variables was significant. The few but consistent linguistic differences related to the use of some pronouns and references to family. ConclusionsAlthough no single clinical feature definitively distinguishes PNES from ES, several features may be suggestive of a PNES diagnosis, including longer duration, negative emotion (i.e., fear) throughout the events, preseizure anxiety, ictal dissociation, and postseizure weeping. Fewer reports of ictal self-injury and postseizure amnesia and aches may also indicate the possibility of PNES.
Highlights
Reliable identification of individuals with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) and epileptic seizures (ES) requires electroencephalography (EEG) and videotape recordings (CCTV/EEG), which is resource demanding and not available in nonspecialized clinics
For the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (LIWC), we report results p b .05, with Hedges' g as a measure of effect size given the unequal number in the groups
Qualitative/quantitative analysis The interviews were independently read by the first two authors who were masked to the participants' diagnoses
Summary
Reliable identification of individuals with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) and epileptic seizures (ES) requires electroencephalography (EEG) and videotape recordings (CCTV/EEG), which is resource demanding and not available in nonspecialized clinics. Not statistically significant probably because of limited power, 80% of PNES could have received a dissociative disorder diagnosis as compared with 45% of ES. Identification of clinical features that might distinguish psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES) from epileptic seizures (ES) is of value for diagnosis, management, and understanding of both conditions. The identified phenomena were descriptively compared, and inferential analyses assessed group differences in frequencies. Results: As compared with ES, PNES reported longer seizures, more preseizure negative emotions (e.g., fear), anxiety symptoms (e.g., arousal, hyperventilation), altered vision/olfaction, and automatic behaviors. PNES reported more fear, altered breathing, and dissociative phenomena (depersonalization, impaired time perception). Conclusions: no single clinical feature definitively distinguishes PNES from ES, several features may be suggestive of a PNES diagnosis, including longer duration, negative emotion (i.e., fear) throughout the events, preseizure anxiety, ictal dissociation, and postseizure weeping.
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