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Mental slowing in relation to epilepsy and antiepileptic medication
Author(s) -
Grevers E.,
Breuer L. E. M.,
IJff D. M.,
Aldenkamp A. P.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
acta neurologica scandinavica
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.967
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1600-0404
pISSN - 0001-6314
DOI - 10.1111/ane.12517
Subject(s) - psychomotor learning , epilepsy , neuropsychology , cognition , psychology , audiology , psychiatry , medicine
Objectives Slowing of the central information‐processing speed ( CIPS ) is frequently observed in epilepsy as a consequence of epileptic seizures and/or antiepileptic drugs ( AED s). A variety of neuropsychological tests are used to asses this ‘mental slowing,’ but it is highly questionable whether the different tasks measure the same cognitive process. Also, it remains unspecified to which degree the various tasks are sensitive to seizure‐ or treatment‐related factors, or both. Methods We used an open clinical non‐comparative study design. The sample consisted of adult patients with cryptogenic localization‐related epilepsy who performed different cognitive measures of CIPS and psychomotor speed (PmS). Clinical data about their seizures and antiepileptic drug treatment were collected from an electronic patient database. Results Eighty patients were included. CIPS tasks mutually correlated significantly, but did not correlate with measures of PmS (finger tapping and reaction time). Also, the CIPS tasks were differently affected by treatment and seizure effects. Processing of complex information is affected by tonic–clonic seizures, while less complex tasks are more sensitive for AED effects. Conclusions CIPS tasks are mainly measuring central processing, and the psychomotor component of these tasks is negligible. We propose a psychometric continuum on which PmS and CIPS tasks are ordered with ascending complexity. The model shows that the tasks are affected differently by seizures, treatment, age, and education level. In neuropsychological practice, this continuum can be helpful in the detection of treatment and seizure effects on the CIPS in epilepsy.