Ictal asystole: a benign condition?

SU Schuele, AC Bermeo, E Locatelli, RC Burgess… - …, 2008 - Wiley Online Library
SU Schuele, AC Bermeo, E Locatelli, RC Burgess, HO Lüders
Epilepsia, 2008Wiley Online Library
Ictal asystole (IA) has been implicated as a preventable cause of sudden unexplained death
in epilepsy presumably provoked by a direct autonomic effect of the electrical stimulus on
the heart. An electronic database search of patients with IA was performed comparing heart
rate (HR) characteristics to a group of patients with vasovagal asystole. IA was seen in eight
patients, all with temporal lobe epilepsy. No statistical difference was found in duration of
asystole, bradycardia, and baseline HR characteristics except of a higher HR acceleration …
Summary
Ictal asystole (IA) has been implicated as a preventable cause of sudden unexplained death in epilepsy presumably provoked by a direct autonomic effect of the electrical stimulus on the heart. An electronic database search of patients with IA was performed comparing heart rate (HR) characteristics to a group of patients with vasovagal asystole. IA was seen in eight patients, all with temporal lobe epilepsy. No statistical difference was found in duration of asystole, bradycardia, and baseline HR characteristics except of a higher HR acceleration postasystole in the controls. None of the six patients with IA who underwent pacemaker implantation had recurrence of asystolic events during mean follow‐up of 5 years. This study in a small group of patients suggests that the epileptic activation leading to IA is possibly mediated through a transient increase in vagal tone and not by a direct autonomic effect on the heart.
Wiley Online Library