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The Celle Seminars_Page 21

Celle Seminar I, Case 1: Epilepsy/Asthma

(G. V.): After your traumatic experience with this man, did you have another relationship? (F.P.): Yes, from 1981 until now. (G. V.): Just one or several? (F.P.): Just one. (G. V.): Are you sure? (F.P.): Yes.
(G.V.): Your tone of voice says, »I’m not sure.« (F.P.): There might have been just one little incident that I did not take seriously.
(G. V.): Do you have epileptic seizures now? (F.P.): I very rarely have real attacks because I’m under medica¬tion. I did have a grand mal attack at the end of last year. (G. V): Can you describe the attacks? What happens? (F.P.): There are differences between the various types of attacks, particularly the intervals between attacks—petit mal attacks and grand mal attacks—which are very short. And then there are attacks while awake and while asleep. This can mean that one petit mal attack follows another. But I didn’t fall, I didn’t collapse. The attacks were prolonged attacks, lasting sometimes several hours.
(G. V.): You don’t know if you bite your tongue or urinate during these seizures? What type of convulsions do you have? (F.P.): I’ve only bitten my tongue during a grand mal attack; and during the grand mal attack, yes, there was a loss of urine. (Therapist): I don’t have the exact date, but sometime between October and September, 1988, she had a grand mal attack. But these have become very rare. (G.V.): How much medication does she take? (Therapist): Three Ergenyl®, ISO. (G. V.): Is this a heavy or a normal dose?
(Therapist): We carried out blood tests to determine the therapeutic dose and the actual drug level in her blood in order to get the balance right. We tried to prescribe a very low dosage.

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