“Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to Homicide

Aims: Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) is the most common symptomatic cause of partial epilepsy worldwide. It can present with vague symptoms including affective disturbances, personality changes, sensory disturbances, altered consciousness etc., which can confound diagnosis. Overt focal or tonic-clonic...

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Main Authors: Indu Surendran, Scott Broadhurst, Inti Qurashi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2025-06-01
Series:BJPsych Open
Online Access:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2056472425108296/type/journal_article
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author Indu Surendran
Scott Broadhurst
Inti Qurashi
author_facet Indu Surendran
Scott Broadhurst
Inti Qurashi
author_sort Indu Surendran
collection DOAJ
description Aims: Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) is the most common symptomatic cause of partial epilepsy worldwide. It can present with vague symptoms including affective disturbances, personality changes, sensory disturbances, altered consciousness etc., which can confound diagnosis. Overt focal or tonic-clonic seizures are present in only 60% patients. It manifests with psychotic symptoms in around 5%. This case report describes how undiagnosed TLE with psychotic symptoms led to grave consequences.
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id doaj-art-1642ebe820b341b5b18cc0492250747a
institution Kabale University
issn 2056-4724
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format Article
series BJPsych Open
spelling doaj-art-1642ebe820b341b5b18cc0492250747a2025-08-20T03:51:44ZengCambridge University PressBJPsych Open2056-47242025-06-0111S321S32110.1192/bjo.2025.10829“Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to HomicideIndu Surendran0Scott Broadhurst1Inti Qurashi2Mersey and West Lancashire NHS Foundation, Prescot, United KingdomMersey and West Lancashire NHS Foundation, Prescot, United KingdomMerseycare Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, Maghull, United KingdomAims: Temporal Lobe Epilepsy (TLE) is the most common symptomatic cause of partial epilepsy worldwide. It can present with vague symptoms including affective disturbances, personality changes, sensory disturbances, altered consciousness etc., which can confound diagnosis. Overt focal or tonic-clonic seizures are present in only 60% patients. It manifests with psychotic symptoms in around 5%. This case report describes how undiagnosed TLE with psychotic symptoms led to grave consequences.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2056472425108296/type/journal_article
spellingShingle Indu Surendran
Scott Broadhurst
Inti Qurashi
“Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to Homicide
BJPsych Open
title “Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to Homicide
title_full “Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to Homicide
title_fullStr “Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to Homicide
title_full_unstemmed “Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to Homicide
title_short “Fit to Kill”: A Case Report on Undiagnosed Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Leading to Homicide
title_sort fit to kill a case report on undiagnosed temporal lobe epilepsy leading to homicide
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S2056472425108296/type/journal_article
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AT scottbroadhurst fittokillacasereportonundiagnosedtemporallobeepilepsyleadingtohomicide
AT intiqurashi fittokillacasereportonundiagnosedtemporallobeepilepsyleadingtohomicide