Somatosensory Auras in Epilepsy: A Narrative Review of the Literature

Author:

Caprara Ana Leticia Fornari1ORCID,Tharwat Ali Hossam2ORCID,Elrefaey Ahmed3ORCID,Elejla Sewar A.4,Rissardo Jamir Pitton1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Medicine Department, Federal University of Santa Maria, Santa Maria 97105-900, Brazil

2. Qena Faculty of Medicine, South Valley University, Qena 8362, Egypt

3. Faculty of Medicine, Ain Shams University, Cairo 11835, Egypt

4. Medicine Department, Alquds University, Jerusalem P850, Palestine

Abstract

An aura is a subjective experience felt in the initial phase of a seizure. Studying auras is relevant as they can be warning signs for people with epilepsy. The incidence of aura tends to be underestimated due to misdiagnosis or underrecognition by patients unless it progresses to motor features. Also, auras are associated with seizure remission after epilepsy surgery and are an important prognostic factor, guiding the resection site and improving surgical outcomes. Somatosensory auras (SSAs) are characterized by abnormal sensations on one or more body parts that may spread to other parts following a somatotopic pattern. The occurrence of SSAs among individuals with epilepsy can range from 1.42% to 80%. The upper extremities are more commonly affected in SSAs, followed by the lower extremities and the face. The most common type of somatosensory aura is paresthetic, followed by painful and thermal auras. In the primary somatosensory auras, sensations occur more commonly contralaterally, while the secondary somatosensory auras can be ipsilateral or bilateral. Despite the high localizing features of somatosensory areas, cortical stimulation studies have shown overlapping sensations originating in the insula and the supplementary sensorimotor area.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

Reference109 articles.

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5. The occurrence and characteristics of auras in a large epilepsy cohort;Nakken;Acta Neurol. Scand.,2009

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