GET THE APP

Three concomitant seizure etiologies in a single brain tumor patient: Clinical reasoning case
..

Neurological Disorders

ISSN: 2329-6895

Open Access

Three concomitant seizure etiologies in a single brain tumor patient: Clinical reasoning case


International Conference on Neuro-Oncology and Psychiatry

September 14-15, 2018 Singapore

Kiran Grant

University of Calgary, Canada

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Neurol Disord

Abstract :

In medicine, we are trained to consider a common denominator in a unicist scenario to account for several concomitant symptoms, especially in young patients. Patients diagnosed with either neurologic or oncologic conditions are prone to various comorbidities resulting from their initial diagnosis. Even in the case of young adults, we need to investigate a broader range of possibilities. We present the case of a young man in his early 30s, diagnosed and treated several years prior for a low-grade glioma (primary brain tumor), consulting for seizure recurrence. The main ambition of seizures initially when his oligodendroglioma was first diagnosed however the tumor is stable on imaging for several years. Three different seizure types are documented in detail. Even if the presence of a low-grade glioma could explain by itself the seizure recurrence, the thorough symptom description and evolution lead to a different hypothesis. This case emphasizes the importance of a good clinical history and research of pertinent details in neuro-oncology patients to reach a prompt and accurate diagnosis. This case describes how three independent ??seizure types? surprisingly occurred in a single patient. We threw light on three concomitant etiologies: Glioma-related seizures, pseudo-seizures and metabolic tonico-clonic generalized seizures resulting from a malignant insulinoma. The goal of this presentation is to trigger interest about the field of neuro-oncology. The patient described signed a written consent, confirming his agreement to have his history presented for academic/teaching purpose.

Biography :

Kiran Grant graduated with honors from the BHSc program in Health Sciences from University of Calgary, Alberta. Kiran is currently enrolled in the Medicine Faculty of University of Toronto as a MD candidate for promotion 2021. He collaborated with his supervisor, Catherine Maurice, on several projects including manuscript redaction, database configuration, development of teaching tools and world health risk prevention. Most recently, Kiran collaborated with “Medicines Sans Frontiers/ Doctors Without Borders” for the configuration and implementation of an adaptable template, created to improve the communication between MSF physicians on the ground and international consultants. He developed an interest in Neuro-Oncology and collaborated to the redaction of several case reports and manuscripts, aiming at raising awareness about unusual case scenarios in Neuro-Oncology.

E-mail: kiran.grant@mail.utoronto.ca

 

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 1343

Neurological Disorders received 1343 citations as per Google Scholar report

Neurological Disorders peer review process verified at publons

Indexed In

 
arrow_upward arrow_upward