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1.
Profile of epilepsy in a developing country: a study of 1,000 patients based on the international classification. 总被引:7,自引:7,他引:0
The present prospective study undertaken in a specialized neurological center of a developing country deals with 1,000 epileptic patients classified in accordance with the International Classification. Eighty-one percent of the patients could be classified, with a lower incidence in the younger age group. Partial epilepsy was found to be far more common than generalized epilepsy (80% versus 20%). Primary generalized epilepsy was seen in 15% and secondary generalized in 5%. Partial epilepsy with elementary symptomatology was seen in 58% and complex symptomatology in 7%. Secondarily generalized seizures were seen in the remaining 15%. Primary generalized epilepsy and partial epilepsy with complex symptomatology were more common in adults. Secondary generalized epilepsy and partial epilepsy with secondarily generalized seizures were more common in children. Partial epilepsy with elementary symptomatology, however, did not vary significantly with age. The higher incidence of partial epilepsy in our patients, compared to the West, could be due to greater frequency of CNS infections and birth injuries, which are common childhood hazards in the developing countries. 相似文献
2.
Epidemiological and Clinical Study of Epilepsy in Benghazi, Libya 总被引:11,自引:10,他引:1
An epidemiologic study of adult patients (aged greater than 15 years) with epilepsy was made over a 2-year period, through the policlinics, EEG laboratory, and university hospitals in Benghazi, northeastern Libya. Based on a total of 568 patients (310 male and 258 female), the prevalence rate on 31 December 1984 was 2.3/1,000 in the population above the age of 15 years (1.9, if age standardized). The age-specific prevalence per 1,000 population decreased from 3.6 in the 15-24 year age group to 1 in the greater than 60-year age group. For 70.8% of the patients the onset of epilepsy occurred in the first 2 decades of life, and for 7.6% it commenced after the age of 40. The duration of epilepsy when first seen in the study period was less than 1 year in 14.6%, and greater than 10 years in 25.7%. The percentages of primary generalized, partial seizures secondarily generalized, simple partial, and partial complex seizures were 55.6, 18.8, 10.4, and 14.6%, respectively. Antecedents that could be considered potential causes of epilepsy were found in 17.5% of cases. Fifty-five patients had status epilepticus, 24 of whom had symptomatic epilepsy and eight recurrent status. EEG revealed generalized epileptic activity in 199 cases and focal seizure activity in 118. Computerized tomography (CT) scan, done in 219 patients, disclosed abnormal results in 50. Among those with abnormal CT scans, 84% had partial seizures. Monotherapy with carbamazepine or phenytoin was used in the majority of cases. The influence of social, cultural, and religious factors in the diagnosis and management of epilepsy as seen in Benghazi are discussed. 相似文献
3.
Genetic factors are commonly assumed to play a more important role in generalized than in partial epilepsy. This study tested this hypothesis by comparing risks of unprovoked seizures in offspring of individuals with generalized versus partial epilepsy. Overall, seizure incidence was no higher in offspring of persons with generalized epilepsy than in offspring of those with partial epilepsy. The number of affected offspring was about three times that expected from population incidence rates, regardless of whether the parent had partial or generalized epilepsy. For the subgroup of generalized cases with absence seizures, however, seizure incidence in offspring was about three times as high as for partial cases. The higher incidence in offspring of absence cases was only partly explained by a higher proportion of absence than partial cases with two factors associated with high risk in relatives, namely early age at onset and idiopathic epilepsy. Offspring of absence cases had higher risk than offspring of other cases not only for absence seizures, but for other seizure types as well, suggesting that absence epilepsy is not genetically distinct from other seizure types of epilepsy. These results suggest that the higher incidence sometimes observed in relatives of patients with generalized epilepsy is due to a small proportion of generalized cases with extremely high familial risks--most generalized epilepsies are no more likely than partial epilepsies to have a genetic basis. 相似文献
4.
Epilepsy in the Elderly 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Summary: Purpose : The aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical characteristics of elderly patients with epilepsy.
Methods : We retrospectively reviewed the clinical records of 190 patients (104 males and 86 females) aged 60 years or older at the time of study.
Results : Epilepsies were classified as generalized in 33 patients (17.4%), partial in 145 (76.3%), and undetermined in 12 (6.3%). Twenty-nine of 33 patients with generalized epilepsy were idiopathic, whereas all patients with partial epilepsy were symptomatic. Symptomatic partial epilepsy (SPE) began at all ages (2 to 81 years). Patients with early onset (< 20 years) showed the most unfavorable course in both seizure control and social adaptability. Patients with late onset (50 years or older) had no family history of epilepsy, and half of them had a past history of ccrebrovascular disease or head injury as a presumed etiology. In patients with idiopathie generalized epilepsy (IGE), 25 of 29 had early onset, and a family history of epilepsy was found in 31%. Nineteen patients continued to have seizures after 50 years of age, albeit infrequently. Furthermore, 10 of them showed exacerbation around the age of 50.
Conclusions : Most of the late onset epilepsies were SPE with a relatively good prognosis. General belief has held that seizure outcome in IGE is favorable, but some IGE patients show an increased seizure propensity in old age. 相似文献
Methods : We retrospectively reviewed the clinical records of 190 patients (104 males and 86 females) aged 60 years or older at the time of study.
Results : Epilepsies were classified as generalized in 33 patients (17.4%), partial in 145 (76.3%), and undetermined in 12 (6.3%). Twenty-nine of 33 patients with generalized epilepsy were idiopathic, whereas all patients with partial epilepsy were symptomatic. Symptomatic partial epilepsy (SPE) began at all ages (2 to 81 years). Patients with early onset (< 20 years) showed the most unfavorable course in both seizure control and social adaptability. Patients with late onset (50 years or older) had no family history of epilepsy, and half of them had a past history of ccrebrovascular disease or head injury as a presumed etiology. In patients with idiopathie generalized epilepsy (IGE), 25 of 29 had early onset, and a family history of epilepsy was found in 31%. Nineteen patients continued to have seizures after 50 years of age, albeit infrequently. Furthermore, 10 of them showed exacerbation around the age of 50.
Conclusions : Most of the late onset epilepsies were SPE with a relatively good prognosis. General belief has held that seizure outcome in IGE is favorable, but some IGE patients show an increased seizure propensity in old age. 相似文献
5.
An analysis of the medical documentation and investigation of 130 cases of epilepsy diagnosed in a group of people over 50 years of age (average: 65.4 years) revealed that the most common type of seizure in the group studied was partial (66.2%), followed by seizures with secondary generalization (33.8%). Epilepsy was caused by cerebrovascular disease (50.8%) considerably more often in patients over 74 years of age, craniocerebral trauma in patients addicted to alcohol (13.1%), especially those under 65 years of age, primary or metastatic neoplastic disease (10.7%), and others. The authors wish to draw attention to the leukoaraiosis factor, which might be the proepileptogenic cause of epilepsy recognized in the group of patients over 74 years of age (56.5%) and is much more frequent in this group than in the group of patients under 65 years of age (1.6%). Moreover, some drugs, such as L-dopa and Baclofen, might have been related to the epileptic seizures. In 29 patients (22.3%) the definite cause of late-onset epilepsy was unknown. The authors suggest in such cases, both follow-up tomographic examination and careful clinical examinations. In the study group of patients with initially unknown seizure etiology, some diseases, such as cerebral tumor or colon and pancreatic neoplasm, were diagnosed during follow-up examination. These processes were revealed several months after the first epileptic seizure. 相似文献
6.
Ovulatory Function in Epilepsy 总被引:13,自引:11,他引:2
Summary Women with epilepsy have lower fertility rates than women without epilepsy. We hypothesized that limbic dysfunction in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) alters the release of hypothalamic trophic hormones that secondarily affect release of the pituitary gonadotropins, causing ovulatory failure. We assessed ovulatory function over three consecutive menstrual cycles in 17 women with partial seizures arising from the temporal lobe (TLE), 7 women with primary generalized epilepsy (PGE), and 12 controls. We devised scores to reflect ovulatory function that were based on daily basal body tem perature and monthly serum progesterone levels. Seizure frequency, antiepileptic drugs (AEDs), and depressive symptomatology were also evaluated. Anovulation was more frequent in subjects with TLE (35.3%) than in subjects with PGE (0%) or in controls (8.3%). Anovulatory cycles tended to occur more frequently in subjects with TLE who were treated with polytherapy than in those receiving monotherapy, but this result was not statistically significant. Seizure frequency and symptoms of depression did not affect ovulatory function. Although AED polytherapy may increase the likelihood of anovulation, our results suggest a mechanism of infertility related to temporal lobe dysfunction. 相似文献
7.
Cesare Maria Cornaggia Maria Paola Canevini Walter Christe† Daniela Giuccioli‡ Maria Angela Facheris Maurizio Sabbadini§ Raffaele Canger 《Epilepsia》1990,31(1):27-32
We conducted an epidemiological survey of epilepsy among males born in 1967 who were called for selection for military service from the Lombardy region in northern Italy. Of 54,520 subjects, 258 had active epilepsy (prevalence, 0.47%). Idiopathic partial epilepsy was most common (29.1%), and generalized idiopathic and/or symptomatic epilepsy was least common (3.8%). In the year preceding the interview, 66.9% of the subjects had been free of generalized tonic-clonic seizures, 57.6% had been free of minor seizures, and 36.9% were seizure-free. Case histories revealed a background of febrile convulsions in 18.9% of subjects, status epilepticus in 11.3%, and a family history of epilepsy in 18.9%. Physical and mental development was normal in 75.5% of the subjects. Education level of subjects was lower than a control group, and the unemployment rate was the same as the local rate. 相似文献
8.
M G Terzano D Mancia O Zacchetti G C Manzoni 《Rivista di patologia nervosa e mentale》1981,101(4):185-201
In a group of 657 epileptic patients there were 51 presenting with fits even after having reached the age of 60. The onset of seizures dated back to the first 20 years in 15 patients between 20 and 40 years in 15 and between 40 and 60 years in 21. In 67% of the cases it was possible to determine the cause of seizures. The aetiology was unevenly distributed within each group. In the first group (up to 20 years) the P.G.E. forms prevail. In the second (up to 40 years) post traumatic epilepsy and inflammatory processes were predominant, while in the third (up to 60 years) vascular and tumoral pathology seem to be prevalent. 43% of the patients showed paroxysmal abnormalities in the EEG and these were still present even after to age of 60 years in more than fifty per cent. After the age of 60 we found no case of benign epilepsy amenable to complete recovery. Patients older than 60 present epilepsies of mild severity. In symptomatic epilepsies the lesional factors were not subject to evolution and the epileptogenic focuses were stable and persistent. In partial epilepsy there were more cases of complex symptomatology (86%) than cases of elementary symptomatology (14%) The evolution of seizures in old age is considered together with the importance of all factors influencing recurrency. 相似文献
9.
BackgroundEpileptic seizures in patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) are heterogeneous with no pathognomonic features. We reviewed epilepsy characteristics and clinical outcome exclusively in a pediatric population.MethodsTwenty-two children and adolescents (13 males) with confirmed mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes due to mitochondrial DNA A3243G mutation and epilepsy were recruited. Clinical data including seizure semiology, treatment response, neuroimaging findings, and electroencephalography were analyzed. We also examined the effect of the age at seizure onset and initial symptoms on the clinical variables.ResultsSeizure semiology and electroencephalography abnormalities showed no syndrome-specific findings. Focal seizures occurred in 21 of 22 subjects (95.5%), whereas generalized seizures developed in seven of 22 subjects (31.8%). Twenty of 22 subjects (90.9%) achieved partial to complete reduction of clinical seizures for more than one year with a combination of more than two antiepileptic drugs. The subgroup with earlier seizure onset presented significantly earlier and showed significantly higher rates of drug-resistant epilepsy compared with the late onset group, although there were no significant differences in the initial symptoms. The subjects with severe epileptic conditions tended to have more severe clinical dysfunction and more severe organ involvement.ConclusionsBoth focal and generalized seizures occurred in patients with MELAS. Epilepsy in this population is drug resistant, but a certain degree of clinical seizure reduction was achievable with antiepileptic drugs, with more favorable outcomes than historically expected. Close observation and active epilepsy treatment of individuals with MELAS episodes and earlier seizure onset might improve the prognosis. 相似文献
10.
Intermittent rhythmic delta activity is reported in various disorders and is classified as a nonspecific abnormal electroencephalographic pattern. We have investigated its clinical and electroencephalographic features in childhood. Intermittent rhythmic delta activity was identified in 54 children over a period of 48 months. Epilepsy was present in 81%, 4% had only a single generalized tonic-clonic seizure, and 15% had no seizures. Generalized seizures were more common than partial seizures (83% versus 13%; 4% were mixed). The largest group of patients had idiopathic epilepsy. Epileptiform features were present in 70%. No patient identified prospectively has had a space-occupying lesion. Intermittent rhythmic delta activity should be considered an epileptiform pattern in children, most commonly occurring as an interictal pattern in primary generalized epilepsy. 相似文献