Characteristics and clinical value of early electroencephalography (EEG) after a first unprovoked seizure in children - 22/06/23
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Abstract |
Objective |
This study aimed to examine the timing and features of electroencephalography (EEG) as a predictor of seizure recurrence in children with a first unprovoked seizure.
Methods |
We retrospectively evaluated the medical records and EEG recordings of pediatric patients who presented within 24 h of a first unprovoked seizure between January 2018-December 2019 and had at least 1 year of pediatric neurology clinical follow-up.
Results |
The study included 108 patients (53.7% males) with a mean age of 98.75±57.75 months. Sixty-eight patients (63%) had an abnormal initial EEG, of which 55 (80.9%) were focal. The semiology of the first unprovoked seizure was focal in 50% of the patients and correlated with initial EEG findings (p<0.001). Forty-three patients had seizure recurrence during the follow-up period of mean 26.86±7.39 months. Recurrence was observed in the first 6 months in 30 patients and occurred twice in 4 patients. An abnormal EEG after the first unprovoked seizure was found to be an independent risk factor for recurrence, with a 2.42-fold higher recurrence risk in patients with focal EEG abnormalities compared to those with a normal EEG (p = 0.044). Analysis of 7 different timing patterns up to 96 h after the first unprovoked seizure showed that EEG timing was not associated with abnormality detection.
Discussion |
Our study showed that EEG abnormalities, especially focal abnormalities, after a first unprovoked seizure are a predictor of seizure recurrence. But the rate of detection of EEG abnormalities was not related to the timing of EEG recording, relative to seizure occurrence.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : EEG, First unprovoked seizure, Recurrence
Plan
Vol 53 - N° 1
Article 102848- février 2023 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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