Next to
tonic-clonic seizures psychomotor (complex
focal) seizures are the most common form of all epileptic
seizures, except in infancy where they are seen rarely. Differently from generalised non convulsive
seizures (like petit mal absences), their first appearance has no typical age limit, however, their proportion to other forms of
seizures increases in adolescence and adults especially between the third and fifth decade of life. The main symptom is the
disorder of consciousness which lasts at least more than half a minute, normally several minutes in completely distinct
seizures, which doesn't begin abruptly and which often ends ill defined. This twilight attack is proceeded by an
aura of sensory, psychic or vegetative character. The
aura is followed either by a transitory state of immobility and later by motor phenomena or at once by motor phenomena in the form of diverse automatisms of variable intensity, reaching from mild movements in the oral region over verbal expressions to highly dramatic scenes, often accompanied by vegetative symptoms. Tonic versive and tonic symmetrical or tonic asymmetrical seizure symptoms are quite often motor variants which also can lead to sudden drops. Psychomotor attacks can be reduced to "pseudo-absences", however, they also can develop into
tonic-clonic seizures (Grand mal). Generally, the succession of seizure symptoms is constant in the same patient, the expression can differ from seizure to seizure. Psychomotor attacks can be spread over the whole day or can show a strict connection to sleep, in the course they can likely occur in clusters and can accumulate to a continuous or discontinuous form of psychomotor
status epilepticus. Predominantly, but not exclusively psychomotor attacks start from the temporal lobe, whereas neocortical temporal attacks (especially of lateral posterior origin) can be distinguished from those coming from the limbic system, especially from hippocampal or mesio-basal temporal structures and from the nucleus amygdalae. About 20% of the psychomotor attacks are of frontal origin coming from the mesial frontal region or from the gyrus cinguli anterior. Also
seizures of occipital or parietal origin can spread so quickly that the seizure itself is impressing as a "temporal lobe attack". On account of that,
epilepsies with psychomotor attacks cannot be compared to
temporal lobe epilepsies. The etiology of psychomotor
epilepsies is closely connected to the topographic site of the temporal lobe, who is especially vulnerable for traumatic lesions,
cerebral edema and
hypoxemia. Also small dysgeneses, heterotopies or small abnormalities of vessels are relatively often found in surgical specimens.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)