Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy

Objective: This study aimed to determine the clinical, electroencephalographic, and radiological factors associated with medically intractable seizures in children in the Al Ain Medical District in the United Arab Emirates. Methods: This work used a prospective case-control study of children referre...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Main Author: Gururaj A.; Sztriha L.; Hertecant J.; Eapen V.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2006
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33747863344&doi=10.1016%2fj.jpsychores.2006.07.018&partnerID=40&md5=663c79789b37f16f262bf83e05221f8d
id 2-s2.0-33747863344
spelling 2-s2.0-33747863344
Gururaj A.; Sztriha L.; Hertecant J.; Eapen V.
Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
2006
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
61
3
10.1016/j.jpsychores.2006.07.018
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33747863344&doi=10.1016%2fj.jpsychores.2006.07.018&partnerID=40&md5=663c79789b37f16f262bf83e05221f8d
Objective: This study aimed to determine the clinical, electroencephalographic, and radiological factors associated with medically intractable seizures in children in the Al Ain Medical District in the United Arab Emirates. Methods: This work used a prospective case-control study of children referred to pediatric neurology and neurodevelopmental clinics at Tawam and Al Ain University Hospitals. Results: There were 55 children with intractable epilepsy; their data were compared with 50 children who responded well to antiepileptic drugs and who were seizure-free for at least 2 years. Onset <1 year of age, a high seizure frequency at onset, positive history of neonatal seizures, developmental delay and status epilepticus, neurological deficits, and abnormal brain imaging results were found to be significantly more common in the study group. Symptomatic localization-related epilepsy was more common in children in this group than in the control group. Conclusion: Our study suggests that children who present with idiopathic localization-related and generalized epilepsy syndromes with few seizures at onset and with no neurological deficits tend to have a relatively good prognosis. © 2006.

223999
English
Article

author Gururaj A.; Sztriha L.; Hertecant J.; Eapen V.
spellingShingle Gururaj A.; Sztriha L.; Hertecant J.; Eapen V.
Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
author_facet Gururaj A.; Sztriha L.; Hertecant J.; Eapen V.
author_sort Gururaj A.; Sztriha L.; Hertecant J.; Eapen V.
title Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
title_short Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
title_full Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
title_fullStr Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
title_full_unstemmed Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
title_sort Clinical predictors of intractable childhood epilepsy
publishDate 2006
container_title Journal of Psychosomatic Research
container_volume 61
container_issue 3
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2006.07.018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-33747863344&doi=10.1016%2fj.jpsychores.2006.07.018&partnerID=40&md5=663c79789b37f16f262bf83e05221f8d
description Objective: This study aimed to determine the clinical, electroencephalographic, and radiological factors associated with medically intractable seizures in children in the Al Ain Medical District in the United Arab Emirates. Methods: This work used a prospective case-control study of children referred to pediatric neurology and neurodevelopmental clinics at Tawam and Al Ain University Hospitals. Results: There were 55 children with intractable epilepsy; their data were compared with 50 children who responded well to antiepileptic drugs and who were seizure-free for at least 2 years. Onset <1 year of age, a high seizure frequency at onset, positive history of neonatal seizures, developmental delay and status epilepticus, neurological deficits, and abnormal brain imaging results were found to be significantly more common in the study group. Symptomatic localization-related epilepsy was more common in children in this group than in the control group. Conclusion: Our study suggests that children who present with idiopathic localization-related and generalized epilepsy syndromes with few seizures at onset and with no neurological deficits tend to have a relatively good prognosis. © 2006.
publisher
issn 223999
language English
format Article
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809678489590169600