When the Stomach Pain Is Literally “In Your Head”
Case Reports
D. Jakubauskas
Vilnius University, Lithuania
M. Sarafinaitė
Vilnius University, Lithuania
R. Mameniškienė
Vilnius University, Lithuania
Published 2024-02-13
https://doi.org/10.29014/NS.2023.27.16
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Keywords

abdominal epilepsy
temporal lobe seizures
gastrointestinal symptoms
hallucinations

How to Cite

1.
Jakubauskas D, Sarafinaitė M, Mameniškienė R. When the Stomach Pain Is Literally “In Your Head”. NS [Internet]. 2024 Feb. 13 [cited 2024 Jul. 18];27(96):116-21. Available from: https://www.journals.vu.lt/neurologijos_seminarai/article/view/34591

Abstract

Abdominal epilepsy (AE) is an extremely rare condition, classified as temporal lobe epilepsy, and is usually a diagnosis of exclusion. Temporal lobe epilepsy often has no clear cause, although it may be associated with diseases such as temporal lobe sclerosis, dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumours, and other benign tumours, as well as arterio-venous malformations, gliomas, defects in neuronal migration, or lesions of the cortex caused by encephalitis. AE is more common in children but has been reported in adults. AEs are characterised by recurrent and unexplained gastrointestinal symptoms such as seizure pain, nausea, bloating and diarrhoea, which improve with antiepileptic treatment. Given the vague nature of these symptoms, patients are at high risk of misdiagnosis. An electroencephalogram and neuroimaging of the brain are needed to confirm the diagnosis.

We present the clinical case of a 67-year-old female patient who was investigated at the Gastroenterology Department for a sharp pain in the left side of the abdomen, frequent abdominal distension and gurgles, diarrhoeal episodes, weight loss, paroxysmal hallucinations, and headaches. After a thorough gastroenterological examination, consultations with a psychiatrist and a neurologist, an MRI and an EEG were performed and the patient was diagnosed with focal temporal lobe epilepsy.

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