So, a friend of mine seized in her Spanish class this morning. She has no history of epilepsy, although she has had several seizures as a result of benzodiazepene withdrawal; the most recent one was in 2008.
Before the seizure, she had not slept in over 48 hours, nor eaten, and had only drunk, according to her count, between 5-7oz of Gatorade during that entire period.
Her concern is that she might seize again. She wants to take benzodiazepenes (or in this case a very close analogue, etizolam) again to raise her seizure threshold and decrease the risk of it happening.
My concern is that she was a hardcore benzo addict for years, to the extent that there were periods of her life during which her memory completely blacked out for months, and that she is simply not capable of taking such drugs on a regular basis without seriously harming herself.
I tell her it's obvious that, with no history of epilepsy and considering her physical condition at the time of the seizure, the seizure was caused by severe dehydration in tandem with extreme sleep deprivation and starvation. As far as I've gleaned researching the issue, it appears that severe dehydration, in itself, can actually cause a seizure, rather than merely lowering the threshold in an already epileptic person. She says that must not be the case because the doctors didn't mention it as being a possible cause.
What do you guys think? Is there any reason to believe that this incident could be the beginning of epilepsy rather than a fluke caused by severe physical and psychosomatic distress? Or at least, reason enough for an ex-benzo addict to start taking benzos again?
Before the seizure, she had not slept in over 48 hours, nor eaten, and had only drunk, according to her count, between 5-7oz of Gatorade during that entire period.
Her concern is that she might seize again. She wants to take benzodiazepenes (or in this case a very close analogue, etizolam) again to raise her seizure threshold and decrease the risk of it happening.
My concern is that she was a hardcore benzo addict for years, to the extent that there were periods of her life during which her memory completely blacked out for months, and that she is simply not capable of taking such drugs on a regular basis without seriously harming herself.
I tell her it's obvious that, with no history of epilepsy and considering her physical condition at the time of the seizure, the seizure was caused by severe dehydration in tandem with extreme sleep deprivation and starvation. As far as I've gleaned researching the issue, it appears that severe dehydration, in itself, can actually cause a seizure, rather than merely lowering the threshold in an already epileptic person. She says that must not be the case because the doctors didn't mention it as being a possible cause.
What do you guys think? Is there any reason to believe that this incident could be the beginning of epilepsy rather than a fluke caused by severe physical and psychosomatic distress? Or at least, reason enough for an ex-benzo addict to start taking benzos again?