Seizure Features Mnemonic [Easy-to-remember]

0
Seizure Features Mnemonic

There’s nothing quite like the moment you get called to the ward because “the patient was unresponsive, then shook a bit, and now they’re sleepy but fine.” 😵‍💫 Classic post-ictal confusion. But was it really a seizure? Or syncope? Or just an afternoon nap rudely interrupted by a junior doctor’s torchlight?

When you’re trying to clinically catch a seizure, this handy mnemonic will help. Let’s break it down.

🧠 Mnemonic: “CATCH A Seizure”

Letter Feature Explanation
C Confusion (post-ictal) The hallmark post-ictal state: confused, disoriented, staring into the void 🌀
A Amnesia (post-ictal) “I don’t remember anything” — often reported by both patient & confused interns
T Tongue-biting Especially lateral — highly suggestive of tonic-clonic seizure
C Cyanosis Apneic episodes during seizure lead to bluish discoloration
H Headache (post-ictal) Common complaint once they regain consciousness 🧠💥
A Aura A sensory warning before seizure — olfactory (“burning rubber”), visual, etc.

 

A Clinical Encounter from Quetta

I once reviewed a 65-year-old lady from Kharan brought in by her daughter: “Doctor sahib, she just collapsed, and then she was chewing something with no food in her mouth.”
Tongue-biting? Check. Post-ictal confusion? Check.
EEG later confirmed temporal lobe epilepsy.

In the elderly, seizures are frequently underdiagnosed — especially when they’re subtle, or misattributed to “just aging” or a TIA. Trust me, even Dr. Basit Khan once chased a full stroke workup before realizing it was a complex partial seizure.

Happy learning! 🙂

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here