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NEUROLOGY 1996;46:45-48
© 1996 American Academy of Neurology

Unilateral blinking

A lateralizing sign in partial seizures

Selim R. Benbadis, MD, Prakash Kotagal, MD and George H. Klem, R.EEG.T

From the Department of Neurology, Section of Epilepsy, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, OH.
Presented in part at the annual meeting of the American Epilepsy Society, New Orleans, LA, December 1994.
Received February 27, 1995. Accepted in final form May 4, 1995.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Selim R. Benbadis, Assistant Professor, Department of Neurology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Comprehensive Epilepsy Program, 9200 W. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53226.

Article abstract-Background: Despite lateralizing signs, clinical lateralization of partial seizures may be difficult. We evaluated the usefulness of ictal unilateral blinking as a new lateralizing sign. Methods: We retrospectively searched our seizure database over a 30-month period and collected videotapes of patients with ictal unilateral blinking. After initial review, we excluded patients in whom blinking was not clearly unilateral and those in whom it was accompanied by simultaneous facial clonic activity or mouth deviation. All patients underwent prolonged EEG-video monitoring. Results: We identified 14 patients who met the above criteria, for a frequency of 1.5%. Age ranged from 18 months to 50 years (mean, 21.6). There were 11 males and 3 females. Unilateral blinking occurred 0 to 37 seconds (mean, 10) after clinical onset and was visible for 1 to 37 seconds (mean, 17). In 10 patients, other lateralizing signs were present. All patients had partial epilepsy, localized by surface EEG in 10 and by additional invasive EEG in four-nine were left hemisphere (four temporal, four frontal, one not further localized), three right hemisphere (two temporal, one frontal), and two undetermined. Of the 12 patients whose epileptogenic zone was lateralized, blinking was ipsilateral in 10 and contralateral in two. The predictive value of unilateral blinking was 83% against EEG localization. Conclusion: Unilateral blinking is a relatively uncommon but reliable lateralizing sign in partial seizures, usually indicating an ipsilateral epileptogenic zone.

NEUROLOGY 1996;46: 45-48




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