I. Drury et A. Beydoun, INTERICTAL EPILEPTIFORM ACTIVITY IN ELDERLY PATIENTS WITH EPILEPSY, Electroencephalography and clinical neurophysiology, 106(4), 1998, pp. 369-373
Objective: To examine the frequency of interictal epileptiform activit
y (LEA) in elderly patients with epilepsy. Design and Methods: From a
consecutive 13905 EEGs recorded over 5 years at a university hospital
EEG laboratory, 558 studies were performed on outpatients aged 60 year
s or more. Medical record review identified 125 patients in whom a con
fident clinical diagnosis of epilepsy was made by a board-certified ne
urologist. The EEG findings in these patients were reviewed. The effec
ts of various variables on the likelihood of detecting IEA were calcul
ated using Fisher's test and chi-square analysis. Results: IEA were pr
esent on the first EEG in 35% of 55 patients (mean age 65 years) with
pre-existing epilepsy, and 26% of 70 patients (mean age 70 years) with
seizure onset after 60 years. There were no significant differences i
n the frequency of IEA in patients with late onset epilepsy in the 7th
or in the 8th decades of life. Most IEA were focal. Activation proced
ures added little additional information. Patients with more than one
seizure per month were significantly more likely to have IEA (P = 0.01
6). There were no major differences in likelihood of IEA detection dep
ending on the underlying cause of the seizures. Conclusions: The frequ
ency of IEA in elderly patients with epilepsy is substantially lower t
han that reported in epileptic populations as a whole. This low rate o
f lEA in routine EEG studies must be recognized when considering the d
iagnosis of an epileptic syndrome for episodic events happening in the
elderly. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd.