McKee Heather R, Privitera Michael D
Department of Neurology, Epilepsy Division, UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute, University of Cincinnati Medical Center (0525), 260 Stetson St., Suite 2300, Cincinnati, OH 45267-0525, USA.
Seizure. 2017 Jan;44:21-26. doi: 10.1016/j.seizure.2016.12.009. Epub 2016 Dec 20.
Stress is a common and important seizure precipitant reported by epilepsy patients. Studies to date have used different methodologies to identify relationships between epilepsy and stress. Several studies have identified anxiety, depression, and childhood trauma as being more common in patients with epilepsy who report stress as a seizure precipitant compared to patients with epilepsy who did not identify stress as a seizure precipitant. In one survey study it was found that a majority of patients with stress-triggered seizures had used some type of stress reduction method on their own and, of those who tried this, an even larger majority felt that these methods improved their seizures. Additionally, small to moderate sized prospective trials, including randomized clinical trials, using general stress reduction methods have shown promise in improving outcomes in patients with epilepsy, but results on seizure frequency have been inconsistent. Based on these studies, we recommend that when clinicians encounter patients who report stress as a seizure precipitant, these patients should be screened for a treatable mood disorder. Furthermore, although seizure reduction with stress reduction methods has not been proven in a randomized controlled trial, other important endpoints like quality of life were improved. Therefore, recommending stress reduction methods to patients with epilepsy appears to be a reasonable low risk adjunctive to standard treatments. The current review highlights the need for future research to help further clarify biological mechanisms of the stress-seizure relationship and emphasizes the need for larger randomized controlled trials to help develop evidence based treatment recommendations for our epilepsy patients.
压力是癫痫患者报告的一种常见且重要的癫痫发作诱发因素。迄今为止的研究采用了不同的方法来确定癫痫与压力之间的关系。几项研究发现,与未将压力视为癫痫发作诱发因素的癫痫患者相比,将压力视为癫痫发作诱发因素的癫痫患者中,焦虑、抑郁和童年创伤更为常见。在一项调查研究中发现,大多数压力诱发癫痫发作的患者自行使用了某种减压方法,在尝试过这种方法的患者中,更大比例的人认为这些方法改善了他们的癫痫发作情况。此外,包括随机临床试验在内的小型至中型前瞻性试验,采用一般减压方法,已显示出改善癫痫患者预后的前景,但癫痫发作频率的结果并不一致。基于这些研究我们建议,当临床医生遇到将压力视为癫痫发作诱发因素的患者时,应对这些患者进行可治疗的情绪障碍筛查。此外尽管减压方法减少癫痫发作尚未在随机对照试验中得到证实,但生活质量等其他重要终点得到了改善。因此,向癫痫患者推荐减压方法似乎是标准治疗的一种合理且低风险的辅助手段。当前的综述强调了未来研究有助于进一步阐明压力与癫痫发作关系生物学机制的必要性,并强调需要开展更大规模的随机对照试验,以帮助为癫痫患者制定基于证据 的治疗建议。