Sensory Epilepsy
Thursday, January 11th, 2001 (continued).
Hi everybody,
I want to reproduce a short exchange Matt and I just had in case you missed it.
Me:
By the way, the zaps, which for me were in my eyes, behind my eyes and in my head, and for others can spread to just about any part of the body (e.g., the face, arms and legs, etc.) — if you look up the paresthesia of sensory epilepsy, you’ll see that the electrical sensations and the pattern of the surges are remarkably similar. The surges begin with one overwhelming surge and then continue, dissipating in strength, but in a continuous rhythm, in waves. I’m talking about SENSORY EPILEPSY. Sound familiar?
Matt:
I work in the area of disability — and recently had a presentation by a colleague on epilepsy. She said the jolts people experience on falling to sleep (big with Paxil usage) are called clonic seizures and are a form of epileptic activity — I’m sure the zaps are too. I don’t want to scare anyone with this — because we all have the propensity for this as we are all “electric” — I just thought it explained a lot.
I think it explains a hell of a lot too (especially since I noticed that the zaps, and now, since I got off the Paxil, my hypersensitivity to unanticipated sound, occur with greater frequency when I’m trying to go to sleep).
Take note: Within this short exchange, Matt and I have proposed an hypothesis. It’s an hypothesis which probably, when compared to the current medical literature on paroxetine withdrawal, is at the cutting edge of the medical research in this area — which isn’t hard to believe once you consider the general ignorance of the medical community with respect to paroxetine withdrawal.
The similarity between epileptic activity and the paresthesia of Paxil withdrawal cannot be just coincidence.