Pseudoseizures have the appearance of epileptic seizures but they are a form of non-epileptic seizure caused by psychological stress rather than abnormal brain activity. Many people who experience this type of seizure have experienced trauma. Pseudoseizures are difficult to diagnose and oftentimes extremely difficult for the patient to comprehend. Distinguishing between pseudoseizures and epileptic seizures is necessary for appropriate treatment.
Due to their cause being rooted in mental stress, these attacks are called psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES). The psychiatric diagnosis for this condition is “conversion disorder” because a mental stress is being converted to a physical manifestation.
The term “pseudoseizure” is an older term that is still used today to describe psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES). One physician has stated that the term “pseudoseizure” should be regarded as jargon, but as coders, we still see this term documented by physicians.
With the causes listed above, treating the patient’s underlying condition is the key to getting control of the attacks.
Performance of an EEG alone is helpful but the results can often be normal in people with epilepsy. Observation in addition to video EEG monitoring seems to be the best way to distinguish pseudoseizures from epileptic seizures. With a video EEG the physician is able to view the activity of the patient during seizure activity. There are differences in how the patient presents during epileptic vs. non-epileptic seizure activity. Below are just a few differences between the two. Keep in mind these are not present in every case.
Pseudoseizure/Psychogenic nonepileptic seizure activity |
Epileptic seizure activity |
Closed eyes during episode | Open eyes during episode |
Wild thrashing, side to side head movements and yelling during these episodes | This would represent diffuse cortical involvement and the patient would not be able to communicate during an epileptic episode involving all four extremities |
Mouth clenched | Mouth is usually open during epileptic seizure |
Being distracted by loud noise or stimulus during episode | During epileptic convulsion the patient should not startle or respond during an event |
Normal activity after episode | Epileptic seizure typically leaves patient somnolent or confused for a period of time |
Postictal normal breathing | Postictal deep, noisy breathing |
No increase in heart rate during episode | Increase of heart rate up to 30% during episode |
With video EEG, the physician is able to view all of the symptoms that are associated with the attack/seizure to help determine the diagnosis.
NO! Treating someone with pseudoseizures as if they have epileptic seizures can be very dangerous. If PNES is treated as an epileptic seizure, the patient will be administered antiepileptic drugs to try and calm the seizure activity. This can result in impaired consciousness and/or respiratory failure. There are also many other adverse reactions that can result from the inappropriate use of antiepileptic medications.
Treatment of PNES requires treating the underlying mental condition as well as physician monitoring and therapies.
Most patients respond to a diagnosis of pseudoseizure/PNES with disbelief, denial, confusion, anger, doubt, sadness, or relief. Some patients worry that they appear to be “faking it”, but PNES is a real condition arising as a response to real stressors and the seizures are not being consciously produced by the patient. In fact, statistics indicate that only about 10% of patients with this diagnosis are feigning illness.
A diagnosis of pseudoseizure without mention of conversion disorder is coded to R56.9, Unspecified convulsions. If a patient has a history of seizures and a current admission with diagnosis of pseudoseizures, the physician should be queried to clarify if this represents recurrent seizure vs. pseudoseizure.
Conversion disorder with seizures or convulsions.
References
ICD-10-CM/PCS Coding Clinic, First Quarter ICD-10 2021 Page: 3
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK441871
https://www.epilepsy.com/article/2014/3/truth-about-psychogenic-nonepileptic-seizures
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/322016
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/17975-conversion-disorder
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/24517-psychogenic-nonepileptic-seizure-pnes
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