He was last seen smiling and chatting with his wife, somewhat resentful about having to spend a day in hospital. A few hours later, while under close monitoring, his heart suddenly stopped and despite resuscitation, he died.
SUDEP is the acronym for Sudden Unexpected Death in Epileptic Patients, and seems to occur in one of every 1000 people suffering from epilepsy claiming over 100,000 lives every year. That is indeed a rather high figure given that epilepsy affects more than 1% of the population, amounting to over 1 crore in India itself.The cause of SUDEP has intrigued neurologists and cardiologists for long. The person found dead often does not show signs of a recent seizure, such as tongue bite or urination suggesting that the cause could have been an irregular heart rhythm. Bursts of irregular electrical activity in the
Epilepsy, a condition characterised by recurrent seizures without any obvious underlying disease, presents with episodic unexpected loss of consciousness usually with abnormal body movements. There are 6 types described: tonic-clonic, tonic, clonic, myoclonic, absence or atonic. Fortunately, there are now several effective medications available to prevent seizure activities, but the patient has to be counselled well to take them regularly without missing a single dose.
Epilepsy is indeed common and has afflicted even great men such as Alexander, Julius Caesar and Napoleon who were said to have suffered from the “falling sickness”. In more recent times celebs such as Edgar Allan Poe, Lewis Carol (writers), Theodore Roosevelt ( President of USA) , Elton John (singer) and several others are on the list, indicating that it does not come much in the way of achievement and longevity in most.
Missing doses of medications can however endanger life of the
patient or those around him. Two months ago when I was rushing to the airport to catch a night flight, the car in which I was traveling suddenly came to halt in the middle of a busy road due the driver suffering a seizure. My experience of being stranded on the highway with an unconscious convulsing driver frothing at the mouth and the prospect of missing the flight was nightmarish, but I soon found myself thanking God for a miracle that saved my life: the unconscious driver’s right foot had fallen on the brake pedal and not the accelerator when he had suffered the seizure.
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