1993
DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1157.1993.tb02590.x
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Parietal and Occipital Lobe Epilepsy: A Review

Abstract: There has been considerable recent interest in frontal lobe epileptic syndromes, and less attention paid to occipital and parietal epilepsies. The occipital and parietal lobes have arbitrary anatomical borders. The prinicpal seizure symptomatology includes somatosensory (paresthetic, painful, thermal, sexual, apraxia, disturbances of body image); visual (amaurotic, elementary and complex hallucinations, illusions) and other phenomena (anosognosia, apraxia, acalculia, alexia, aphemia, confusional states, gustat… Show more

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Cited by 188 publications
(131 citation statements)
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“…Such phenomenon is responsible for the complex ictal manifestations involving diverse brain areas, making it difficult to obtain a clear picture of the overall dynamics and potentially leading to important errors when surgery for epilepsy is considered. With the exception of elementary visual symptoms, which are relatively rare, the clinical manifestations associated with occipital lobe epilepsy are not very informative about the particular area of onset of the epilepsy within the posterior brain (reviewed in Sveinbjornsdottir and Duncan (1993)). Complex visual auras, hallucinations, amaurosis, version of head and eyes, eye blinking, have a poor localizing value and can be obtained by electrical stimulation in both occipital, parietal and temporal lobes (reviewed in Geller et al (2000)).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such phenomenon is responsible for the complex ictal manifestations involving diverse brain areas, making it difficult to obtain a clear picture of the overall dynamics and potentially leading to important errors when surgery for epilepsy is considered. With the exception of elementary visual symptoms, which are relatively rare, the clinical manifestations associated with occipital lobe epilepsy are not very informative about the particular area of onset of the epilepsy within the posterior brain (reviewed in Sveinbjornsdottir and Duncan (1993)). Complex visual auras, hallucinations, amaurosis, version of head and eyes, eye blinking, have a poor localizing value and can be obtained by electrical stimulation in both occipital, parietal and temporal lobes (reviewed in Geller et al (2000)).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The criteria for inclusion were seizures typical of occipital or parietal origin (6)(7)(8)(9), with radiological or pathological evidence of a congenital developmental abnormality. This encompassed malformations of cortical development and perinatal insults resulting in porencephalic cysts or focal encephalomalacia (1)(2)(3)(10)(11)(12)(13).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Based on epidemiologic studies, the most common etiology for parietal lobe seizures is mass lesions (e.g., gliomas or astrocytomas) followed by birth and postnatal trauma and postinflammatory gliosis. 2 The sulcal effacement in this case could represent a subtle mass effect of a low-grade glioma given the lack of contrast enhancement. An inflammatory (e.g., autoimmune or paraneoplastic) process in the setting of a mild lymphocytic predominant leukocytosis in the initially obtained CSF is possible.…”
Section: Sectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…1 Somatosensory symptoms are the most common auras associated with parietal lobe seizures followed by affective, vertiginous, and visual auras. 2 Both the occipital and parietal lobe are relatively small lobes that are well connected to the ipsilateral frontal and temporal lobe, thalamus, and the supplementary sensorimotor areas (SSMAs). 2 Motor representation in the SSMAs is bihemispheric and these regions are well connected with subcortical structures, which can result in seizures involving unilateral asymmetric tonic posturing of extremities, complex limb movements (e.g., bicycling), and truncal rotation.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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