Background
Obstructive sleep apnea is a highly prevalent disorder, characterized by recurrent events of upper airway obstruction during sleep and associated with recurrent cycles of desaturation and re-oxygenation, sympathetic hyperactivity, and intra-thoracic pressure fluctuations, resulting in fragmentation of sleep and subsequent daytime fatigue with excessive sleepiness. Obstructive sleep apnea-induced bilateral tonic–clonic seizures are unheard of. We aimed to report 3 patients with previously undiagnosed obstructive sleep apnea who presented to the emergency department with new onset bilateral tonic–clonic seizure without any evidential neurological or metabolic cause.
Methods
Patient data were obtained from medical records from the Department of Internal Medicine, IPGMER and SSKM Hospital, Kolkata, and Belle Vue Clinic, Kolkata, India.
Results
Three male patients (67, 58, and 44 years old) presented with bilateral tonic–clonic seizure disorder without any underlying cause of seizures after rigorous investigations except for moderate to severe obstructive sleep apnea on polysomnography. All 2 patients were seizure-free after being treated with levetiracetam, chronic continuous positive airway pressure therapy in 2, and only continuous positive airway pressure in the other. The patients remained seizure-free on continuous positive airway pressure, even when levetiracetam was withdrawn, suggesting obstructive sleep apnea's causality in their new-onset acute seizures.
Conclusion
Although further investigation is required to clarify this association, underlying obstructive sleep apnea should be ruled out in patients with a first-ever bilateral tonic–clonic seizure. Whether or not continuous positive airway pressure alone could effectively treat hypoxia and deranged cortical excitability, which may lead to seizures in cases with long-standing obstructive sleep apnea, is yet to be explored.