Volume 38, Issue 8 p. 945-949
Free Access

De Novo Aphasic Status Epilepticus

David Andrew Grimes,

Department of Neurology, Ottawa General Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

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Alan Guberman,

Corresponding Author

Department of Neurology, Ottawa General Hospital, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. A. Guberman at Department of Neurology, Ottawa General Hospital, 501 Smyth Rd., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada KIH 8L6.Search for more papers by this author
First published: 03 August 2005
Citations: 30

Summary

: The literature contains only a handful of reports of patients with aphasia as the principal or only obvious manifestation of partial status epilepticus. Even fewer patients of this type have been well documented both clinically and by ictal EEG monitoring. We studied an otherwise healthy woman with abrupt onset of aphasia initially thought to be the result of an infarct of the left temporoparietal area. We were able to document partial status epilepticus involving the left temporoparieta1 area with EEG/video monitoring and showed rapid reversal of the aphasic disorder with antiepileptic drug (AED) treatment. The case is presented with a review of previous reports to underscore the importance of considering this diagnosis in patients with abrupt onset of aphasia.

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