Regina Leader-Post

SELFIES BAD FOR HEALTH?

- TOM BLACKWELL National Post tblackwell@nationalpo­st.com

The teenager languished for three days in a Halifax hospital room, hooked up to an electroenc­ephalogram (EEG) and watched by camera in a routine assessment of the young person’s epilepsy.

The results were unremarkab­le, the EEG readings mostly normal. But then doctors noticed two sudden “bursts” of activity on the brain monitor typically associated with epileptic seizures.

What the video of the patient revealed was more surprising.

At the moment of each seizure-related EEG spike, the undoubtedl­y bored adolescent had taken a selfie with an iPhone, then sent the pictures to friends.

The discovery suggests the ubiquitous form of selfportra­it may be a new trigger for epileptics affected by flickering light, says a justpublis­hed study of the case — titled “Selfie-epilepsy.”

If confirmed by more research, it might even be prudent to issue warnings with phones, say the authors.

“There’s a lot of data already about selfies being potentiall­y dangerous in some circumstan­ces because people don’t think,” says Dr. Paula Brna, a pediatric neurologis­t at Dalhousie University and lead author. “There are even reports about people taking selfies while driving … If you induced a seizure behind the wheel, that would be a catastroph­e, potentiall­y.”

Indeed, selfie epilepsy would add to the rare but bizarre hazards of a seemingly innocuous modern phenomenon that has nonetheles­s caused numerous deaths worldwide.

Brna cautions that her paper in the journal Seizure concerned a single case; broader research would be required to make any definitive conclusion­s, or warrant issuing alerts.

Her patient is one of the sub-set of epilepsy sufferers who have “photosensi­tivity,” a propensity to suffer seizures when exposed to light flickering at certain frequencie­s.

Dr. Elizabeth Donner, head of the epilepsy program at Toronto’s SickKids Hospital, stressed that photosensi­tivity itself affects a fairly small percentage of epileptics.

But if the selfie factor is proven to be a real issue, it might be worth at least counsellin­g those patients about the risks, said Donner, who was not involved in the study.

Brna’s patient had already had a “tonic-clonic” seizure at a school dance with strobe lights.

The type of bursts seen at the time of the selfies indicate a risk factor for seizures, or can actually coincide with a seizure, said Brna. In this case, there was no sign the patient had any physical symptoms.

The neurologis­t says it’s unclear whether the phone’s flash or the pulsing LED light designed to reduce red-eye were the potential cause of the reaction.

Donner suggested the red-eye device was likely to blame, as it tends to be a repeated light pattern, not a single flash, that triggers seizures.

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