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Title: | Psychogenic non-epileptic seizures in children and adolescents: Part I – Diagnostic formulations | Authors: | Cook, Averil Gill, Deepak Carrive, Pascal Scher, Stephen Kozlowska, Kasia Chudleigh, Catherine Cruz, Catherine Lim, Melissa McClure, Georgia Savage, Blanche Shah, Ubaid |
Issue Date: | 2018 | Source: | 23, (1), 2018, p. 140-159 | Pages: | 140-159 | Journal: | Clinical Child Psychology & Psychiatry | Abstract: | Psychogenic non-epileptic seizures (PNES) are a nonspecific, umbrella category that is used to collect together a range of atypical neurophysiological responses to emotional distress, physiological stressors and danger. Because PNES mimic epileptic seizures, children and adolescents with PNES usually present to neurologists or to epilepsy monitoring units. After a comprehensive neurological evaluation and a diagnosis of PNES, the patient is referred to mental health services for treatment. This study documents the diagnostic formulations – the clinical formulations about the probable neurophysiological mechanisms – that were constructed for 60 consecutive children and adolescents with PNES who were referred to our Mind-Body Rehabilitation Programme for treatment. As a heuristic framework, we used a contemporary reworking of Janet’s dissociation model: PNES occur in the context of a destabilized neural system and reflect a release of prewired motor programmes following a functional failure in cognitive-emotional executive control circuitry. Using this framework, we clustered the 60 patients into six different subgroups: (1) dissociative PNES (23/60; 38%), (2) dissociative PNES triggered by hyperventilation (32/60; 53%), (3) innate defence responses presenting as PNES (6/60; 10%), (4) PNES triggered by vocal cord adduction (1/60; 2%), (5) PNES triggered by activation of the valsalva manoeuvre (1/60; 1.5%) and (6) PNES triggered by reflex activation of the vagus (2/60; 3%). As described in the companion article, these diagnostic formulations were used, in turn, both to inform the explanations of PNES that we gave to families and to design clinical interventions for helping the children and adolescents gain control of their PNES.research; tables/charts. Journal Subset: Biomedical; Double Blind Peer Reviewed; Editorial Board Reviewed; Europe; Expert Peer Reviewed; Peer Reviewed; UK & Ireland. NLM UID: 9604507. | DOI: | 10.1177/1359104517732118 | Resources: | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&AuthType=ip,athens&db=ccm&AN=127141582&site=ehost-live | Keywords: | Child;Mind Body Techniques -- Education;Vocal Cords;Nervous System Diseases;Somatoform Disorders;Early Intervention;Outcome Assessment;Neurobiology;Epilepsy -- DiagnosisDisease Attributes;Human;Adolescence | Type: | JOUR|lson Department of Neurology, The Children’s Hospital at Westmead, NSW, AustraliaLady Cilento Children’s Hospital, Queensland, Australia |Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service Macarthur (ICAMHS) Macarthur, NSW, Australia |Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, McLean Hospital, Belmont, MA, USA |Department of Anatomy, School of Medical Sciences, University of NSW, Australia | |
Appears in Sites: | Children's Health Queensland Publications |
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