Autonomic epilepsy: clonidine blockade of paroxysmal catecholamine release and flushing.
Cuvinte cheie
Abstract
We studied a 59-year-old man with transient paroxysms of hypertension, tachycardia, and flushing in whom pheochromocytoma was excluded. Although catecholamine excretion was normal, plasma catecholamine levels rose from normal basal levels (282 +/- 14 pg/ml) to increased levels (585 +/- 67 pg/ml; x +/- SEM; n = 4) at the peak of spells. Other hormones or substrates expected to rise with nonspecific "stress" did not increase after paroxysms. Therapy with clonidine (0.2 to 0.4 mg/day) suppressed basal catecholamines to undetectable levels and markedly reduced peak levels during spells (80 pg/ml). An epileptic pathogenesis was suggested by stereotypic olfactory and epigastric prodromata before spells, and abolition of paroxysms with the anticonvulsant carbamazepine. This patient represents a rare case of autonomic epilepsy with the seizure focus in the temporal lobe.