1. Stroke and Epilepsy
- Author
-
Scott D. Spritzer
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Atrial fibrillation ,Emergency department ,medicine.disease ,Sick sinus syndrome ,Epilepsy ,Internal medicine ,Aphasia ,Cardiology ,medicine ,Levetiracetam ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Stroke ,medicine.drug ,Postictal state - Abstract
An 87-year-old female with atrial fibrillation, off anticoagulation, and sick sinus syndrome with permanent pacemaker presents to the emergency department after waking up with new-onset aphasia and right hemiparesis after going to bed normal the night prior. Her initial head CT showed no clear cause, and she demonstrated moderate improvement during the first 24 h of hospital admission. An EEG was obtained, demonstrating left temporal lateralized periodic discharges, and additional follow-up head CTs showed no clear infarct. Her clinical symptoms of aphasia and right-sided weakness continued to fluctuate, and a follow-up EEG demonstrated resolution of the left temporal discharges. She was discharged from the hospital on levetiracetam with a diagnosis of new-onset focal seizures with prolonged postictal state, only to clinically worsen and return 1 day later. Repeat head CT at that time demonstrated an evolving left insular infarct. Levetiracetam was ultimately discontinued, without additional seizures, and the patient was left with ongoing clinical symptoms consistent with a left hemispheric ischemic stroke.
- Published
- 2020
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