7/17/2012

The Epilepsies: Seizures, Syndromes and Management Review

The Epilepsies: Seizures, Syndromes and Management
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Until recently, this book was out of print and totally unavailable. ( I had to purchase it three times from used booksellers. One copy was destroyed in shipping, one was lost and the third one I had to purchase from one of those rip-off book dealers in Great Britain. )
BTW, this book is HARDBACK and not paperpack so you are getting what you paid for.
Other books to consider would be:
1) Handbook of Epilepsy Treatment 2nd ed. by Simon Shorvon
2) Status Epilepticus by Simon Shorvon
3) Photosensitive Epilepsy ( New Edition ) by F. A. Graham ( dated but interesting )
4) Partial Seizures and Interictal Disorders by David P. Moore
This book, The Epilepsies: Seizures, Syndromes and Management, has one of the best sections on photosensitive epilepsy in print( from pages 452-472 ). This section, alone, justifies the price and the entire book is of similar value and quality
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Note that the following are general comments about epilepsy and do NOT refer to this book.

In general, there is not much particularly interesting and useful regarding photosensitive epilepsy. To me, testing for photosensitive epilepsy by exposing the patient to a strobe pulsing at various frequencies is marginally diagnostic. ( Outside of discotheques, how often you you encounter pulse trains produced by strobes ? )
Fluorescent lights, computer video display terminals, the dotted lines on a road, fences, trees planted along a roadway, even the oscillations of quaking aspen leaves; NONE of these produce waveforms similar to a strobe. ( Strobes have very, very low duty cycles whereas more natural sources of repetitive flashing / blinking have much higher duty cycles - say from 1% for trees to 50% for fencing or blinking produced by various poorly designed pieces of electronic equipment.
There is an extremely interesting form of epilepsy called non-convulsive status epilepticus. There is a similar form of epilepsy accompanied by complete paralysis ( NOT Todd's Paralysis ) lasting hours or even a day with no postictal confusion. ( There is a reference to this in Moore but I cannot find the page )
It is my thesis that many, many people have a sub-clinical form of epilepsy, better described as cortical irritability, in which they have problems, specifically, with fluorescent lights and computer displays. ( The previous paragraph suggests that some individuals affected with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or Multiple Chemical Sensitivities may actually have epilepsy ) There are also an enormous variety of reflex epilepsies.
Anyways, I'm warn out so enough is enough.


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The Epilepsies: Seizures, Syndromes and Management is the latest work from one of the world's leading experts and offers an exhaustive account of the classification and management of epileptic disorders. In thirteen chapters, Dr Panayiotopoulos gives clear and didactic guidance on the diagnosis, treatment and ongoing management of the full spectrum of epileptic syndromes with an insight and perception that only he can bring to the subject.This text is published in full colour throughout and is complemented by a pharmacopoeia and CD ROM with patient video-EEGs. An attractive, clear page layout and the accompanying supplementary material help the reader to easily identify the key components of each disorder, syndrome and seizure. Drawing on the author's outstanding collection of video-EEGs the accompanying CD ROM is cross-referenced within the text thus providing the reader with both a clinical and visual description of the various epileptic disorders and further aiding diagnosis.

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