Approach to the patient with transient alteration of consciousness

Thomas R. Henry, Mustapha A. Ezzeddine

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Evaluating transient impairment of consciousness is critical to diagnose epileptic seizures, syncope, para-somnias, organic encephalopathies, and psychogen-ic nonepileptic seizures. Effective evaluation of episodic unconscious events demands interactive interviewing of the patient and witnesses of the events, with judgment as to historians' observational abilities. When generalized tonic-clonic seizures have been witnessed by medical staff or other reliable observers, a search for concomitant nonconvul-sive events and for comorbid illnesses often elucidates diagnoses unsuspected by the referring physician. Consultation for stupor-coma should not miss a potentially reversible acute severe encepha-lopathy, particularly when reversibility requires timely therapy. Perspicacious analyses of complex cognitive-motor phenomena support judicious application of diagnostic procedures, including brief or prolonged EEG and video-EEG, EKG tilt-table testing, EKG loop monitoring, and brain imaging.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)179-186
Number of pages8
JournalNeurology: Clinical Practice
Volume2
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2012

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