CHARACTERISTICS OF SEIZURES IN A POPULATION-BASED SERIES OF MENTALLY-RETARDED CHILDREN WITH ACTIVE EPILEPSY

Citation
U. Steffenburg et al., CHARACTERISTICS OF SEIZURES IN A POPULATION-BASED SERIES OF MENTALLY-RETARDED CHILDREN WITH ACTIVE EPILEPSY, Epilepsia, 37(9), 1996, pp. 850-856
Citations number
40
Categorie Soggetti
Clinical Neurology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00139580
Volume
37
Issue
9
Year of publication
1996
Pages
850 - 856
Database
ISI
SICI code
0013-9580(1996)37:9<850:COSIAP>2.0.ZU;2-F
Abstract
Purpose: The characteristics of seizures were analysed in a population -based study of active epilepsy in 6- to 13-year-old mentally retarded children. Methods: The search procedure included diagnostic registers , EEG registers, and registers of the Education of the Subnormal. Medi cal files were scrutinized, and clinical examinations and interviews w ith parents or caretakers or both were performed. Results: The median age of seizure onset was 1.3 years, 3.1 for children with mild retarda tion and 0.8 for children with severe retardation. Among the 98 childr en identified, current seizure groups were partial in 20, generalized in 59, and mixed in 19. The prevailing seizure types were tonic-clonic , myoclonic, atypical absences, and partial complex seizures, present in 42, 33, 23, and 23 children, respectively. A total of 46 children h ad more than one seizure type. Seizures every day/week occurred in 44 children. There was a constancy between seizure type at onset and late r seizure type. Neonatal seizures (n = 25), infantile spasms (n = 12), and status epilepticus (n = 37) occurred independent of one another. Prognostic factors for poor neurologic outcome were early onset of epi lepsy, infantile spasms as onset type, and prior neonatal seizures. Ch ildren with only partial seizures less frequently had severe mental re tardation, cerebral palsy, and visual impairment than those with only generalized seizures. Conclusions: Epilepsies in children with mental retardation are characterized by severe seizure manifestations. The br ain damage giving rise to mental retardation and epilepsy is probably the main factor in terms of seizure outcome.