Cerebellar Dysfunction and Ataxia in Patients with Epilepsy: Coincidence, Consequence, or Cause?

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Authors

MARCIÁN Václav FILIP Pavel BAREŠ Martin BRÁZDIL Milan

Year of publication 2016
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Tremor and Other Hyperkinetic Movements
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Web https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27375960
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.7916/D8KH0NBT
Field Neurology, neurosurgery, neurosciences
Keywords Ataxia; epilepsy; seizures; atrophy; stimulation
Description Basic epilepsy teachings assert that seizures arise from the cerebral cortex, glossing over infratentorial structures such as the cerebellum that are believed to modulate rather than generate seizures. Nonetheless, ataxia and other clinical findings in epileptic patients are slowly but inevitably drawing attention to this neural node. Tracing the evolution of this line of inquiry from the observed coincidence of cerebellar atrophy and cerebellar dysfunction (most apparently manifested as ataxia) in epilepsy to their close association, this review considers converging clinical, physiological, histological, and neuroimaging evidence that support incorporating the cerebellum into epilepsy pathology. We examine reports of still controversial cerebellar epilepsy, studies of cerebellar stimulation alleviating paroxysmal epileptic activity, studies and case reports of cerebellar lesions directly associated with seizures, and conditions in which ataxia is accompanied by epileptic seizures. Finally, the review substantiates the role of this complex brain structure in epilepsy whether by coincidence, as a consequence of deleterious cortical epileptic activity or antiepileptic drugs, or the very cause of the disease.

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