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½Ç¸í¼º °£ÁúÁßøÁõ l·Ê A Case of Status Epilepticus Amauroticus

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ÀÌ¿¬È¿ ( Lee Yeon-Hyo ) 
°æ»ó´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ ½Å°æ°úÇб³½Ç

±è³²°ï ( Kim Nam-Gon ) 
±èÇØ Áß¾Óº´¿ø ½Å°æ°ú
±Ç¿À¿µ ( Kwon Oh-Young ) 
°æ»ó´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ ½Å°æ°úÇб³½Ç
¹Ú±âÁ¾ ( Park Ki-Jong ) 
°æ»ó´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ ½Å°æ°úÇб³½Ç
ÃÖ³«Ãµ ( Choi Nack-Cheon ) 
°æ»ó´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ ½Å°æ°úÇб³½Ç
ÀÓº´ÈÆ ( Lim Byeong-Hoon ) 
°æ»ó´ëÇб³ ÀÇ°ú´ëÇÐ ½Å°æ°úÇб³½Ç

Abstract


Ictal blindness is a deficient symptomatology of partial seizure arising from visual cortex and usually short lived. When the blindness is the initial semiology of seizures, epileptic discharge arising from the primary visual cortex is associated. Ictal blindness has been reported in many patients with occipital lobe epilepsy, but prolonged ictal blindness called status epilepticus amauroticus has been reported only in few patients. We report a 45-year-old woman who had suffered prolonged epileptic blindness. The epileptic blindness was accompanied with rapid eyelid blinking and upward turning of head and eyeballs. Motor seizure and mental changes were not occurred. Ictal EEG showed 11-13 Hz repetitive spikes on the right occipital area followed by propagation to ipsilateral temporal area and contralateral occipital area. On T2-weighted MRI, abnormal lesions with high signal intensity were noted within bilateral occipital areas. She had been improved dramatically by loading dose of intravenous phenytoin.

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°£Áú¼º ½Ç¸í; ½Ç¸í¼º °£ÁúÁßøÁõ; Èĵο± °£Áú; ¹ßÀÛÁß µÎÇdzúÆÄ
Ictal blindness; Status epilepticus amauroticus; Occipital lobe epilepsy; Ictal EE

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