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Background: Rigorously documented ictal fear is infrequent, and its anatomoclinical correlations remain poorly defined. We aim to determine its localizing value and provide novel evidence of the clinical importance and theoretical meaning about ictal fear and emotional processes in children.
Methods: Of 1624 consecutive pediatric patients assessed, we identify seven with carefully defined and strict video-electroencephalography (EEG)-recorded ictal fear (130 seizures), two with additional intracerebral stereo-EEG and electrical brain stimulation examinations. A comprehensive study of EEG and semiology is performed, comprising synchronized analysis of seizure origin and propagation and supported by neuroimaging.
Results: Despite activation of distinctive anatomically distributed regions in different patients, a common clinical picture emerges. Ictal fear seems more frequent in girls, and a right hemispheric predominance is observed. Additionally, a particular common state of fear was documented, suggesting that such event is embodied by the activation of a specific neural network of elements scattered about different areas.
Conclusions: We describe a common clinical setting for ictal fear in children, clarifying diagnosis, localizing value, and medical/surgical prognosis. We delineate the variable underlying networks implicated in ictal fear, including highly interconnected structures (the insula, hypothalamus, and parietal lobe), integrating our findings into the modern theories of fear.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2025.05.010 | DOI Listing |
Epilepsia Open
August 2025
Neurology Clinic University Clinical Center of Serbia, Belgrade, Serbia.
Objective: Approximately, one-third of patients with epilepsy (PWE) have drug-resistant epilepsy (DRE). This condition significantly impacts quality of life, leads to various negative socioeconomic consequences, and increases the risk of sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). Surgical treatment is considered the most effective option for patients with lesional DRE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpileptic Disord
July 2025
Department of Neuropediatrics, University Children's Hospital, and University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
Seizures originating from the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) have distinct clinical features but can be difficult to identify in frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE). This systematic review examines the key semiology of ACC seizures and their anatomical correlations. A systematic search was conducted following PRISMA guidelines, including studies reporting ictal semiology, invasive EEG findings, and surgical outcomes in patients with ACC seizures, allowing for the establishment of anatomical and clinical correlations with a high level of confidence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpilepsia Open
July 2025
Department of Neurology, Division of Child and Adolescent Neurology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Rochester, Minnesota, USA.
Objective: To assess the localization and lateralization values of ictal emotional features and ictal defensive behaviors in pediatric and young adult patients with frontal lobe epilepsy (FLE).
Methods: Children and young adults with FLE were identified from a single institution's epilepsy surgery database. Two epileptologists determined by consensus the presence of ictal emotional features (positive- smile, laughter, humming, singing; negative- fear, crying, anger, disgust, contempt, sadness) and ictal defensive behaviors (freezing with a fearful facial expression, shielding the face with hands, burying the face in a pillow, or exhibiting hyperkinetic motor behaviors like attempting to escape from bed or resisting restraint) in each patient's first video EEG (vEEG).
Pediatr Neurol
August 2025
School of Medicine, Universidad Francisco de Vitoria, Pozuelo de Alarcón, Spain.
Background: Rigorously documented ictal fear is infrequent, and its anatomoclinical correlations remain poorly defined. We aim to determine its localizing value and provide novel evidence of the clinical importance and theoretical meaning about ictal fear and emotional processes in children.
Methods: Of 1624 consecutive pediatric patients assessed, we identify seven with carefully defined and strict video-electroencephalography (EEG)-recorded ictal fear (130 seizures), two with additional intracerebral stereo-EEG and electrical brain stimulation examinations.
Epileptic Disord
June 2025
Comprehensive Epilepsy Center, Northwestern Memorial Hospital, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
We performed a systematic review of the localization value of ictal mimic automatisms-including gelastic, dacrystic, fearful, ritualistic, and kissing semiology-in focal epilepsy. We performed a comprehensive literature search (Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane, Scopus) for patient-level studies, following a PRISMA and QUADAS2 approach. Patients with focal epilepsy displaying mimic automatism, defined as "stereotyped mimicry or behavior that resembles the usual way one expresses oneself to reflect an affect and that is not accompanied by the corresponding emotion" were included.
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