Clinical experts associated with national epilepsy-related societies, led by the Epilepsy Foundation, collected, collated and answered "Frequently asked questions (FAQ)" of broad interest pertaining to visually-provoked seizures. Questions emerged from people with epilepsy, caretakers and healthcare professionals from different countries around the world. Focus is on practical implications of visually-provoked seizures. The top 5 most frequently asked questions were. 1. How does a doctor make a diagnosis of visually-provoked seizures? 2. What can I do in general to prevent visually-provoked seizures? 3. Will I need antiseizure medications for my visually-provoked seizures?" 4. Will I outgrow visually-provoked seizures? How will I know if I've outgrown them? 5. How do I enable safety features to block content that could trigger seizures on social media, websites, phones, laptops and tablets? Answers were based on scientific evidence, where such information was available [1] and expert opinion when formal evidence was insufficient. Key answers included distinction of photoparoxysmal EEG findings versus light-provoked seizures. Typical provocation is by flashes at 10-25 per second or certain moving patterns. There is a genetic risk, which is outgrown in about half. Covering one or both eyes can prevent a light-provoked seizure. TV, videogames, virtual reality and 3D images are not in themselves provocative, but their content can be. Topics covered included: 1. Photosensitive epilepsy diagnosis; 2. Preventing visually-provoked seizures; 3. Do treatments help; 4. Life and behavioral decisions; 5. School; 6. Multi-media; 7. Children and youth.

Frequently asked questions and answers on Visually-Provoked (Photosensitive) epilepsy / Kasteleijn-Nolst Trenite, D.; Acharya, J.; Baumer, F. M.; Beran, R.; Craiu, D.; French, J.; Parisi, P.; Solodar, J.; Szaflarski, J. P.; Takahashi, Y.; Thio, L. L.; Tolchin, B.; Wilkins, A.; Fisher, R. S.. - In: EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR REPORTS. - ISSN 2589-9864. - 30:(2025). [10.1016/j.ebr.2025.100753]

Frequently asked questions and answers on Visually-Provoked (Photosensitive) epilepsy

Parisi P.
Writing – Review & Editing
;
2025

Abstract

Clinical experts associated with national epilepsy-related societies, led by the Epilepsy Foundation, collected, collated and answered "Frequently asked questions (FAQ)" of broad interest pertaining to visually-provoked seizures. Questions emerged from people with epilepsy, caretakers and healthcare professionals from different countries around the world. Focus is on practical implications of visually-provoked seizures. The top 5 most frequently asked questions were. 1. How does a doctor make a diagnosis of visually-provoked seizures? 2. What can I do in general to prevent visually-provoked seizures? 3. Will I need antiseizure medications for my visually-provoked seizures?" 4. Will I outgrow visually-provoked seizures? How will I know if I've outgrown them? 5. How do I enable safety features to block content that could trigger seizures on social media, websites, phones, laptops and tablets? Answers were based on scientific evidence, where such information was available [1] and expert opinion when formal evidence was insufficient. Key answers included distinction of photoparoxysmal EEG findings versus light-provoked seizures. Typical provocation is by flashes at 10-25 per second or certain moving patterns. There is a genetic risk, which is outgrown in about half. Covering one or both eyes can prevent a light-provoked seizure. TV, videogames, virtual reality and 3D images are not in themselves provocative, but their content can be. Topics covered included: 1. Photosensitive epilepsy diagnosis; 2. Preventing visually-provoked seizures; 3. Do treatments help; 4. Life and behavioral decisions; 5. School; 6. Multi-media; 7. Children and youth.
2025
epilepsy; pattern-sensitive seizures; photosensitive seizures; reflex epilepsy; video game seizures
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Frequently asked questions and answers on Visually-Provoked (Photosensitive) epilepsy / Kasteleijn-Nolst Trenite, D.; Acharya, J.; Baumer, F. M.; Beran, R.; Craiu, D.; French, J.; Parisi, P.; Solodar, J.; Szaflarski, J. P.; Takahashi, Y.; Thio, L. L.; Tolchin, B.; Wilkins, A.; Fisher, R. S.. - In: EPILEPSY & BEHAVIOR REPORTS. - ISSN 2589-9864. - 30:(2025). [10.1016/j.ebr.2025.100753]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1737135
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