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BNPA Abstracts

014 THE IMPACT OF EPILEPSY ON COGNITIVE FUNCTION


doi:10.1136/jnnp-2013-306103.14

Christoph Helmstaedter

Prof. Dr. phil. Christoph Helmstaedter, Dept. of Epileptology,


University of Bonn, Bonn/Germany.
Current position and activities: Head of the section of clinical
neuropsychology of the department of Epileptology, University
Clinic Bonn, Germany. The major work focuses on declarative
verbal and visual-spatial memory and functional plasticity in
healthy subjects and epilepsy patients with temporal lobe epi-
lepsy across the ages with special consideration of developmen-
tal neuropsychology in the maturing (developmental hindrance)
and ageing (accelerated decline) brain. Other issues of interest
are the frontal lobes and executive functions, cerebral functional
organisation, and the development of assessment tools. The
clinical work focuses on neuropsychological and behavioural
monitoring and outcome control of the course of epilepsy and
its medical, invasive, semi-invasive and psychological treatment.
The work is linked to groups doing structural and functional
imaging, surface and intracranial EEG and network analyses,
neuropathology, and more recently also genetics.
Cognitive problems and behavioral in epilepsy are frequent if
they are not the rule. They can have multiple causes, the most
important being brain lesions, seizures, epileptic dysfunction,
and treatment. Whereas problems originating from lesions are
mostly static and irreversible, problems associated with seizures
and treatment are more dynamic and generally reversible.
However, persisting problems can be the result of active epilepsy

J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2013;84:e1 5 of 15


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BNPA Abstracts

or treatment interfering with critical phases of brain develop-


ment. Under certain individual conditions chronic and more
severe epilepsy can cause mental decline. In the majority of
patients this is, however, not the case. Now there is increasing
evidence that cognitive problems often exist from the beginning
of the disease. Mental decline thus results from synergistic effects
between initial and later acquired lesions and mental aging rather
than from seizures progressively damaging the brain.
This calls for neuropsychological evaluation and countermea-
sures early in the course of epilepsy. Antiepileptic drug treat-
ment can have positive as well as negative effects on cognition.
In chronic epilepsy the patient’s focus shifts from seizure
control to the side effects of treatment and comorbidities. Thus,
therapy, and polytherapy in particular, need to take the cogni-
tive side effects of antiepileptic drugs into consideration.
Repeated application of subjective questionnaires and short
screening tests can be helpful. In pharmacoresistant focal epi-
lepsy, surgery can be a successful treatment option. However,
surgery and other invasive treatments can cause additional
impairments, which on the other hand can be reduced by select-
ive and individual approaches, which aim at the preservation of
functional tissues. The longer term cognitive outcomes after
surgery appear very promising, particularly when patients
become seizure free. Respective findings suggest a reconsider-
ation of the negative impact of interictal epileptic dysfunction
on cognition.

6 of 15 J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2013;84:e1


Downloaded from http://jnnp.bmj.com/ on August 19, 2017 - Published by group.bmj.com

THE IMPACT OF EPILEPSY ON COGNITIVE


FUNCTION
Christoph Helmstaedter

J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2013 84: e1


doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2013-306103.14

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Collections Epilepsy and seizures (846)
Stroke (1449)
Neuropathology (183)

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