Structural Causes of Epilepsy
What Is a Structural Epilepsy?
Epilepsy is said to have a structural cause if there is a distinct abnormal structural cause present in the brain that is known to substantially increase the risk of seizures. Most of these causes can be seen on imaging of the brain with an MRI.
What Are the Symptoms of a Structural Epilepsy?
Structural epilepsies in older children and adults most commonly present with focal seizures and have very similar symptoms from event to event. In some cases, seizures can spread to both sides of the brain, leading to a generalized tonic-clonic seizure.
Persons with structural causes may also have other symptoms that reflect a structural abnormality in one brain area, such as difficulty:
- Using one arm or leg, or one half of the body
- With speech
- With vision on one side
Infants and young children with structural epilepsies may also present with focal seizures or may present with other seizure types such as infantile spasms or tonic seizures. In such cases, there is often a slowing of development once seizures begin.
In most persons with a structural epilepsy, the brain MRI is abnormal.
Learn More:
Brain Imaging for EpilepsiesHow Do You Get a Structural Epilepsy?
Structural abnormalities can be congenital or acquired.
Congenital Cause
This cause is a developmental change in the brain that a person is born with. Some congenital structural causes may also have a genetic component. In most cases, these changes are seen in babies born to women whose pregnancies have been otherwise normal, and we do not understand why these changes occur. In some cases of congenital structural causes, seizures begin very early in life. In other cases, seizures begin many years after birth, often in later childhood or even early adulthood.
Acquired Cause
A structural abnormality may occur due to a process or injury that occurs in someone with previously normal brain structure. Examples are brain tumors, strokes or head trauma. These injuries lead to the brain being more susceptible to seizures and epilepsy can occur.
How Do You Treat It?
Anti-seizure medicines are most commonly the initial treatment for persons with a structural abnormality. However, in some cases, such as tumors or blood vessel abnormalities, surgery is required to treat the underlying cause.
While many persons with structural cases will have their seizures controlled with anti-seizure medicine, a portion will continue to have seizures, and will develop drug-resistant epilepsy. Many persons with structural epilepsy and drug-resistant seizures can be candidates for epilepsy surgery. It is recommended that persons who continue to have seizures despite trials of two anti-seizure medications be seen at a comprehensive epilepsy center.
Specific Structural Causes Associated with Epilepsy
- Hypothalamic hamartoma
- Aicardi syndrome
- Focal cortical dysplasia
- Cavernous and other vascular malformations
- Brain tumors- Dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumors (DNETS), gangliogliomas and low-grade tumors
- Mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS)
- Multiple Sclerosis
- Traumatic brain injury (TBI)
- Perinatal brain injury
- Vascular injury
- Hemimegalencephaly
- Schizencephaly
- Periventricular nodular heterotopia (PVNH)
- Polymicrogyria (PMG)
Neurocutaneous Syndromes
Neurocutaneous syndromes are a group of neurologic (brain, spine, and peripheral nerve) disorders that can cause cutaneous (skin) manifestations, such as tumors that grow inside the brain, spinal cord, organs, skin, and skeletal bones. These disorders frequently also cause seizures, brain malformations, eye lesions, and intellectual disability.
Neurocutaneous syndromes that can be associated with seizures include:
- Incontinentia pigmenti
- Neurofibromatosis Type 1
- Sturge Weber Syndrome (Encephalotrigeminal Angiomatosis)
- Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC)
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