Psychiatric Seizures
- Psychiatric seizures resemble epileptic seizures. Symptoms include involuntary movements and involuntary behaviors such as yelling or crying.
- People who have psychiatric seizures may suffer from conditions such as anxiety or depression. They may have a history of auditory or visual hallucinations or psychosis.
- According to Michael Miller, editor of "Harvard Mental Health Letter," more than 75 percent of people with epilepsy have a diagnosable psychiatric condition and about 10 percent of all patients in psychiatric hospitals have epilepsy. The same abnormalities in the brain can cause both conditions.
- Doctors use video electroencephalography (vEEG) monitoring to evaluate psychiatric seizures. They observe patients having seizures without accompanying changes on the EEG, which would normally been seen in epileptic patients.
- Doctors prescribe psychotherapy or psychotropic medications or both to treat psychiatric seizures. Patients should also try to identify things that trigger seizures, such as stressful situations, and avoid triggers if they can.
Symptoms
Other Psychiatric Symptoms
Prevalence of Seizure Disorders in Psychiatric Patients
Evaluating Psychiatric Seizures
Treatment
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