Purpose: To analyze patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy from temporal (TLE) and extra-temporal origin (ETE) and to compare the prevalence of psychiatric comorbid disorders and impulsivity between them and a control group.
Methods: Consecutively studied patients with TLE and ETE confirmed with Video-EEG were included. Standardized psychiatric assessment was conducted using the Structured Clinical Interview for Axis I and II diagnosis of DSM-IV (SCID I-II), the Barrat-11 scale for impulsivity, and Beck inventory for depression. Parametric and nonparametric tests were performed.
Results: Seventy-three patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), 21 extra-temporal epilepsy (ETE) and 58 healthy control subjects were included. Both groups of patients showed a high frequency of Axis I comorbid psychiatric disorders: Depression was the most frequent disorder followed by Anxiety Disorders. Furthermore, Axis II (Personality disorders) were also diagnosed, similarly in both groups of patients (p > 0.05). In addition, both TLE and ETE groups presented higher impulsivity scores compared with the control group (p < 0.01). ETE showed a tendency to a higher impulsivity in the motor factor (p = 0.05). Among patients with TLE, a left laterality of the epileptogenic zone, and the presence of comorbid psychiatric disorders (depression), were found as independent factors associated with higher impulsivity (p < 0.05).
Conclusion: Comorbid depression associated with higher impulsivity are important issues to consider in behavioral and clinical evaluation of patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsies, with the aim to set up a prompt treatment.
Keywords: Depression; Left epileptogenic zone; Personality disorders; Psychiatric disorders; Seizures.
Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.